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Treatment now available for young children with peanut allergies

Children wear the patch for a half an hour a day, and then increase it until eventually, it’s worn 24/7.

ATLANTA, Ga. (Ivanhoe Newswire) – More than 5.5 million kids have a food allergy – that’s about one in 13 kids, or one or two kids in every single classroom.

Even though more than 170 foods have been reported to cause allergies – eggs, milk, and peanuts are the most common.

Recently, the FDA approved an oral treatment for older children with peanut allergies, but there was no treatment for children under the age of four, until now.

Keleb Billeter broke out into hives over his chest, torso and face when he was 6 months old, his mom said.

A skin test proved Kaleb was allergic to peanuts, tree nuts, and eggs.

Dr. Brian Vickery, a pediatric allergist at Emory University and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, said until now, there was very little they could do to help children like Kaleb.

“What we’ve been studying is to expose patients to small bits of what they’re allergic to, to change their immune responses. And what’s exciting is that, you can actually do this through the skin,” Vickery said.

It’s called epicutaneous immunotherapy, or EPIT.

“Peanut proteins are coated on the underside of a small patch that’s about the size of a nickel or a quarter. Then, immune cells in the skin are actually able to pick up the allergenic protein and deliver it to the immune system to give it instructions on how to respond to peanut allergen,” Vickery explained.

Children wear the patch for a half an hour a day, and then increase it until eventually, it’s worn 24/7.

“This is not a cure, this does not reverse the allergy and make it go away completely, it just lessens the sensitivity levels,” Vickery said.

Kaleb doesn’t need the patch anymore, but he does eat a half a teaspoon of peanut butter a day, and now he can do this without having an allergic reaction.

Fun fact: according to Harvard Medical School, peanuts are not nuts, they are actually legumes because they are seeds that grow into pods. But peanuts are not the only food allergy being studied by using a patch – milk and egg patches are also in clinical trials, and doctors believe this is just the beginning and patches could be used for multiple allergens in the coming years.


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