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Tolerance to Baked Goods in Allergic Children

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cow Milk Protein Allergy
Hen Egg Allergy
Registration Number
NCT06998225
Lead Sponsor
Fundació Sant Joan de Déu
Brief Summary

Food allergies are more common in children, especially in Western countries. Around 5 to 8% of children have at least one food allergy, compared to only 1-2% of adults. These allergies can really affect child's quality of life and create stress for the whole family. The most common foods that cause allergic reactions are cow's milk, egg, nuts, fish, and shellfish.

Until now, the usual way to manage a food allergy has been to completely avoid the food. But this can be hard, limiting kids diets and puts them at risk of accidental exposure, and may even cause nutritional problems.

Oral immunotherapy (OIT) has become and alternative treatment. It consists in giving very small amounts of the food allergen regularly to help the body get used to it. Some studies show this helps children build tolerance faster than just avoiding the food. But OIT also comes with risks, including allergic reactions during the treatment, some of which can be serious.

Some research is focusing on a gentler and safer option: giving children baked milk or baked egg. When milk or egg is baked (for example, in muffins or cookies), the high heat changes the proteins, making them less likely to cause allergic reactions. The heat breaks the parts of the protein that the immune system usually reacts to, and mixing them with wheat flour makes them even less reactive.

Interestingly, this doesn't work for every food, peanuts, for example, can actually become more allergenic when heated. But in the case of milk and egg, baking seems to be very helpful.

Giving baked milk or egg to allergic children has shown some immune system changes similar to OIT, but in a safer and more natural way. This can make life a lot easier, not just for the kids, but also for their families since it broadens their diet, improves their nutrition, and reduces stress in social situations.

Studies suggest that introducing baked milk and egg early on could also help kids become fully tolerant sooner.

At Sant Joan de Déu Hospital in Barcelona, doctors have been using OIT for milk and egg allergies since 2006 in children over 5 years old. While the treatment has helped many, not all children become fully desensitized, and some still react to milk or egg occasionally. The success rate is around 70%, and it's often less effective in children with severe allergies, like those who have had anaphylaxis.

Detailed Description

This is a 12-month, prospective, randomized interventional study designed to evaluate immunological tolerance development in young children with confirmed cow's milk or egg allergy. The primary endpoint is the acquisition of clinical tolerance to raw or minimally processed forms of the allergen after structured dietary exposure to baked forms. The study integrates immunologic, clinical, and laboratory evaluations to assess the therapeutic potential and immunomodulatory effects of gradual allergen introduction.

Study Population Inclusion Criteria Age: 12 to 72 months (1 to 6 years). Milk Allergy Subgroup: Confirmed diagnosis based on at least one of the following: suggestive clinical history, positive skin prick test (SPT) ≥3 mm over negative control and/or specific IgE ≥0.35 kU/L to cow's milk or casein.

Egg Allergy Subgroup: Either: suggestive clinical history and sensitization (SPT or sIgE ≥0.35 kU/L to egg white or ovomucoid).

Exclusion Criteria Inability to obtain written informed consent. Any contraindication to epinephrine use (e.g., uncorrected congenital heart disease).

Ongoing consumption of baked milk or egg ≥3 times/week within the last 3 months.

Baseline Procedures and Immune Profiling (T0)

All participants will undergo:

Supervised Oral Food Challenge (OFC) with a standardized baked milk or egg product (e.g., muffin containing measured protein quantity), carried out under hospital supervision with immediate access to emergency care.

Blood Sampling for:

Quantitative allergen-specific IgE, IgG4, IgA to milk/egg and their major components (e.g., casein, ovomucoid).

Flow cytometry for T-cell phenotyping (CD4⁺CD25⁺FoxP3⁺ regulatory T cells). Cytokine profiling via ELISA or multiplex immunoassay: IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, IL-13, TGF-β.

Basophil Activation Test (BAT) using CD63/CD203c expression upon allergen stimulation.

Skin Prick Testing with commercial milk/egg extracts and baked food extracts, if available.

Randomization and Treatment Arms

Participants are stratified based on baked food OFC outcome:

A. OFC-Positive to Baked Product

Randomized 1:1 to:

Baked Group 1 (Low-dose exposure): Daily ingestion of baked product containing fixed dose (e.g., 0.0375 g milk protein or 0.11 g egg protein).

Control Group 1 (Strict avoidance): Elimination of all milk/egg and derivatives.

Non-tolerant to minimum baked dose: Excluded from active intervention; followed as observational cohort with repeated testing at 12 months.

B. OFC-Negative to Baked Product Progress to OFC with pasteurized milk or cooked egg. If tolerant → study exit.

If reactive, randomization into:

Baked Group 2 (High-dose exposure): Daily ingestion of baked food containing higher protein load (e.g., 0.55 g milk protein or 1.1 g egg protein).

Control Group 2 (Strict avoidance).

All OFCs use a standardized 6-step titration protocol with cumulative dosing and observation for ≥2 hours post-ingestion.

Dose Escalation and Monitoring After 6 months: Hospital-based supervised dose escalation (doubling daily intake) for Baked Groups 1 and 2.

Final Assessment (T1 - 12 months) Repeat OFC with unheated (raw) milk or cooked/raw egg. Repeat blood testing, SPT, and BAT.

Comparative analysis between baseline and T1 to determine:

Acquisition of tolerance (negative OFC). Immune modulation (e.g., shifts in IgE/IgG4 ratios, Treg expansion, cytokine profile normalization).

Predictive value of baseline biomarkers for outcome stratification.

This detailed protocol structure enables reproducibility, comparability, and the possibility of identifying immunological biomarkers that correlate with successful oral immunotolerance induction through gradual dietary exposure to baked allergens.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
148
Inclusion Criteria
  • Children with confirmed allergy to cow's milk or cooked egg
Exclusion Criteria
  • Contraindication to epinephrine use
  • Ongoing consumption of baked milk or egg goods

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1. To evaluate proportion of children who develop tolerance to raw milk or cooked/raw egg at 12 months.12 months from enrollment

Proportion of participants who achieve clinical tolerance to raw cow's milk or cooked/raw egg following 12 months of intervention. All participants underwent a controlled oral food challenge (OFC) in day's hospital. The intervention will be evaluated positively if the participant become tolerant. An increase in the reaction threshold dose relative to the initial OFC will also be considered favorable. If symptoms appear immediately, the patient will be considered allergic.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in immunologic markers (IgE, IgG4, Tregs, BAT).12 months intervention

Longitudinal changes in immunological biomarkers (specific IgE, IgG4, Tregs, and BAT) over the 12-month study period. The measurements of the biomarkers obtained initially (T0) and after the intervention (T1) were compared, observing a reduction in specific IgE and an increase in IgG4 in the tolerant patients. The BAT has also shown changes in the intervention but the statistical significance must be individualized by food. T-cell cytokine profiling in patients with cow's milk allergy showed no significant changes. Analysis for the egg allergy group is pending.

Rate of reactions during oral food challenges.12 months intervention

Number and severity of reactions recorded during oral food challenge procedures were obtained T0 and T1. The severity of reactions were classified according to the EACCI position paper 2007.

Changes in threshold dose triggering reactions.12 months intervention

Variation in the minimum eliciting dose (MED) triggering allergic symptoms in the OFC at T1 was evaluated. An increase in the tolerated allergen dose without a clinical reaction indicates a higher reaction threshold-dose, and this was assessed as favorable after the intervention. This condition would allow the participant to follow a less restrictive diet and, consequently, less concern about food safety.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Barcelona

🇪🇸

Esplugues de LLobregat, Barcelona, Spain

Barcelona
🇪🇸Esplugues de LLobregat, Barcelona, Spain
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