Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Peanuts For Babies? Studies Back Allergy-preventing Strategy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2016 12:22 PM
    CHICAGO — Two new studies bolster evidence that feeding babies peanuts or other allergy-inducing foods is more likely to protect them than to cause problems.
     
    One study, a follow-up to landmark research published last year, suggests that the early prevention strategy leads to persistent, long-lasting results in children at risk for food allergies. It found that allergy protection lasted at least through age 5 and didn't wane even when kids stopped eating peanut-containing foods for a year.
     
    That means at-risk kids who don't want to eat peanut butter on a weekly basis can take safely take a break, at least for a year.
     
    The second new study suggests that the early strategy could also work with eggs, another food that can cause allergies in young children. It found that allergies to peanuts and eggs were less common in young children who started eating those foods at 3 months of age than in kids who as infants received only breast milk.
     
    The New England Journal of Medicine published both new studies online Friday, coinciding with their presentation at a medical meeting in Los Angeles.
     
    Food allergies are common, potentially serious and sometimes deadly. They're becoming more prevalent in children in many countries, affecting up to 8 per cent of kids under age 3. About 2 per cent of U.S. kids have peanut allergies.
     
    The results from last year's study prompted a sea change in experts' approach to preventing these allergies. It was the first "to show that early introduction of peanut can prevent the development of allergy to it," Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a statement.
     
    It also led to new draft guidance issued Friday by a panel convened by Fauci's agency. The recommendations include giving at-risk kids peanut-containing food as early as 4- to 6-months of age. Infants at risk are those with severe skin rashes or egg allergies; allergy tests are recommended beforehand.
     
    The agency paid for last year's study and follow-up, and will issue final guidelines after a 45-day comment period. The draft guidance echoes advice issued last year by the American Academy of Pediatrics and other medical groups in response to the ground-breaking study.
     
    That study involved more than 600 at-risk British infants. By age 5, peanut allergies were much less common in children who had started eating peanut-based foods before age 1, usually peanut butter or a peanut-based snack, than among children who'd been told to abstain.
     
     
    The follow-up involved most of those children. After a year off, an additional three kids in both groups tested positive for peanut allergies. The allergies remained much less common in the early peanut eaters — affecting just under 5 per cent of those kids versus almost 19 per cent of the others.
     
    The new results suggest that early introduction of allergy-inducing foods results in "true tolerance" in at-risk kids, said Dr. Stacy Dorris, an allergist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She was not involved in the research.
     
    The second study involved 1,300 study breast-fed British children randomly assigned to get several types of allergy-inducing foods or just breast milk.
     
    The strongest results were with peanut-based food and eggs but there was one hitch. About 60 per cent of the early eaters didn't stick to the program. Some may have had immature swallowing skills; some doctors don't recommend starting solid foods until around 4 months of age. But it's possible some parents stopped giving solid foods because they noticed allergy-like symptoms, which may have included false alarms, said Dr. Gideon Lack, a King's College London researcher who led all three studies.
     
    The results suggest feeding these foods to at-risk infants is safe, but often not feasible in infants so young, said Dr. Gary Wong, a Hong Kong pediatrician. He wrote an editorial published online with the new studies.
     
    Still, Wong said the new studies confirm that the old approach to preventing food allergies — avoiding certain foods early in life — is probably obsolete.
     
    "Evidence is really building up. It appears early introduction would be better off than avoidance," said Wong, who is also an associate editor at the journal.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Oral cancer virus spreads via oral, genital route

    Oral cancer virus spreads via oral, genital route
    Transmission of human papillomavirus (HPV) occurs via oral-oral and oral-genital routes, says new research....

    Oral cancer virus spreads via oral, genital route

    A virus that could affect brain's activities

    A virus that could affect brain's activities
    People with algae virus in their throats had more difficulty completing a mental exercise than healthy people, and more research is needed to understand why...

    A virus that could affect brain's activities

    How mucus in mouth naturally fight cavities

    How mucus in mouth naturally fight cavities
    Salivary mucins, key components of mucus, actively protect the teeth from cavity-causing bacteria, new research shows....

    How mucus in mouth naturally fight cavities

    Television viewing to help detect eye diseases

    Television viewing to help detect eye diseases
    Mapping how your eyes respond to watching television can lead to early detection of diseases such as glaucoma, one of the leading causes of blindness worldwide, research shows....

    Television viewing to help detect eye diseases

    Cow's milk can deliver AIDS drug to infants

    Cow's milk can deliver AIDS drug to infants
    A milk powder containing anti-retroviral drugs, which are not very soluble in water, can help better treat and prevent HIV infection in babies, research shows....

    Cow's milk can deliver AIDS drug to infants

    Veterinarians' Group Issues Advice On Quarantine And Handling Pets That May Catch Ebola

    Veterinarians' Group Issues Advice On Quarantine And Handling Pets That May Catch Ebola
    NEW YORK — A veterinarians' group has put out guidance on handling pets that may have been infected by Ebola. It says that if an animal tests positive, it should be euthanized.

    Veterinarians' Group Issues Advice On Quarantine And Handling Pets That May Catch Ebola