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The Risk Reduction of Accidental Exposure-Related Systemic Allergic Reactions Extrapolated Based on Food Challenge Data After 1 Year of Peanut Oral Immunotherapy. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A phase 3 trial (PALISADE) showed that peanut allergen powder-dnfp (PTAH) treatment significantly increased the ability of peanut-allergic children to tolerate higher doses of peanut protein after one year.
  • The study used survival analysis to assess the risk of systemic allergic reactions (SAR) after accidental exposure to peanuts, comparing data from PTAH-treated and placebo participants.
  • Results indicated a 94.9% reduction in SAR risk for PTAH-treated children versus 6.4% for the placebo group, with even higher risk reductions for those tolerating larger doses at trial exit.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The phase 3 trial PALISADE, comparing peanut (Arachis hypogaea) allergen powder-dnfp (PTAH) oral immunotherapy versus placebo in peanut-allergic children, reported that a significantly higher percentage of PTAH-treated participants tolerated higher doses of peanut protein after 1 year of treatment. This study used PALISADE data to estimate the reduction in the risk of systemic allergic reaction (SAR) after accidental exposure following 1 year of PTAH treatment.

Methods: Participants (aged 4-17 years) enrolled in PALISADE were included. Parametric interval-censoring survival analysis with the maximum likelihood estimation was used to construct a real-world distribution of peanut protein exposure using lifetime SAR history and highest tolerated dose (HTD) from a double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge conducted at baseline. The SAR risk reduction was extrapolated using the exposure distribution and the HTD were collected at baseline and trial exit for PTAH- and placebo-treated participants.

Results: Assuming a maximum peanut protein intake of 1500 mg, participants were estimated to have < 1% probability of ingesting > 0.01 mg during daily life. The mean annual SAR risk at trial entry was 9.25-9.98%. At trial exit, the relative SAR risk reduction following accidental exposure was 94.9% for PTAH versus 6.4% for placebo. For PTAH-treated participants with exit HTD of 600 or 1000 mg without dose-limiting symptoms, the SAR risk reduction increased to 97.2%. The result was consistent in the sensitivity analysis across different parametric distributions.

Conclusion: Oral immunotherapy with PTAH is expected to result in a substantially greater reduction in risk of SAR following accidental exposure compared to placebo among children with peanut allergy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8264172PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12325-021-01843-2DOI Listing

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