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Milk Hypersensitivity clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02223182 Completed - Food Allergy Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety of Viaskin Milk in Children With IgE-Mediated Cow's Milk Allergy

MILES
Start date: November 2014
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The objectives of this study are to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Viaskin Milk after 12 months of epicutaneous immunotherapy (EPIT) treatment, for desensitizing IgE-mediated cow's milk allergic children and to assess the long-term safety and therapeutic benefit with Viaskin Milk.

NCT ID: NCT02216175 Completed - Food Allergy Clinical Trials

Improving the Safety of Oral Immunotherapy for Cow's Milk Allergy

SOCMA
Start date: July 19, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Allergy to cow's milk is the most common food allergy affecting children. There is currently no accepted routine clinical therapy to cure milk allergy. Recently studies have attempted to induce desensitisation using small daily doses of cow's milk, predominantly by the oral route (oral immunotherapy, OIT). Although this therapy works for some people, its effects are not generally long lasting and it is associated with significant side effects during protocol, including potentially life-threatening allergic reactions. Pilot data suggests that sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT, where allergen is held under the tongue, rather than swallowed) can also induce a degree of desensitisation, but with fewer adverse events. However, the degree of desensitisation induced appears to be lower than that with oral immunotherapy. The investigators wish to determine whether a sublingual pretreatment phase can improve the safety of conventional OIT in cow's milk allergy.

NCT ID: NCT02149134 Recruiting - Cow's Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Efficacy of a New Infant Formula in Subjects With Cow's Milk Allergy

Start date: October 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Cow's milk protein allergy is defined as an immunological reaction to one or more milk proteins. A variety of symptoms can be suggestive for cow's milk protein allergy . Cow's milk protein allergy is suspected clinically in 5-15% of infants, while most estimates of prevalence of cow's milk protein allergy vary from only 2 to 5 %. Confusion regarding cow's milk protein allergy prevalence is often due to differences in study populations, study design and a lack of defined diagnostic criteria. The importance of defined diagnostic criteria needs to be emphasised. It precludes infants from an unnecessary diet and avoids delay in diagnosis, which can lead to malnutrition. There are two clinical types of cow's milk protein allergy: the immediate and the delayed type. The immediate type usually presents within minutes after the ingestion of cow's milk protein with urticaria, angio-oedema, vomiting or an acute flare of atopic dermatitis and is present in slightly more than half of the patients with cow's milk protein allergy. Delayed reactions such as atopic dermatitis or gastrointestinal symptoms like proctocolitis or enteropathy usually present after hours or days. Immunologically, cow's milk protein allergy can be IgE or non-IgE mediated. IgE mediated reactions are often of the immediate type. Non-IgE mediated reactions are often cell mediated or mixed cell and IgE mediated and are more difficult to prove by specific testing. The immunological reaction differentiates cow's milk protein allergy from other milk induced pathology such as lactose intolerance. A variety of symptoms can be suggestive for cow's milk protein allergy although none of them is diagnostic. A good medical history remains the cornerstone for the diagnosis. The treatment of cow's milk protein allergy is the dietary elimination of cow's milk proteins. In non-breastfed infants and children less than 2 years of age, a substitute formula is mandatory as prescribed by several international scientific societies. Extensively hydrolyzed formulas are used as therapeutic formulas. An extensively hydrolysed formula is often a whey or casein based formula in which the protein has been chopped up in smaller pieces that are less allergenic. Because of high cross-reactivity (up to 80%) and nutritional inadequacy, the use of any other animal milk or soy-based formula is precluded.The infant should be maintained on an elimination diet until the child is between 9-12 months of age or at least for 6 months, whichever occurs first. In most cases, symptoms will improve substantially within 2-4 weeks if diagnosis is correct. According to consensus in literature, a therapeutic formula is a formula tolerated by at least 90% (with 95% confidence) of cow's milk protein allergy infants. The aim of the investigators study is to show the efficacy, tolerance and nutritional adequacy of a newly developed thickened extensively hydrolyzed formula in infants with a proven cow's milk protein allergy. In all included patients, cow's milk protein allergy will have been diagnosed based on a double blind placebo controlled food challenge, considered as golden standard in cow's milk protein allergy diagnosis. To evaluate efficacy of the formula, the formula has to be tolerated by at least 90% (with 95% confidence) of cow's milk protein allergy infants following literature consensus. A symptom diary will be filled out for this purpose by the patients' parents or legal guardians and the patient will be followed clinically by his doctor several times during the study period. Nutritional adequacy of the formula will be evaluated clinically by following growth and weight several times during the study period and by comparing it to the standard WHO growth curves, based on breastfed infants.

NCT ID: NCT02144428 Recruiting - Cow's Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Hypoallergenicity To Substitutive Formulas In Children With Cow's Milk Allergy

Start date: April 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The management of children with confirmed cow's milk allergy is based on complete avoidance of cow's milk proteins and leaves the physician with several dietary options, none of which, given the prevalence, spectrum and potential seriousness of the condition, can be recommended to all patients. In the absence of an alternative to cow's milk, the management of cow's milk allergy is based on the use of safe, affordable and nutritionally adequate formulas. Extensively hydrolyzed cow's milk protein formulas, which are considered as safe for most children with cow's milk allergy, are still liable to contain residual peptides, and hypersensitivity reactions may occur in infants allergic to cow's milk protein. Thus, specific product allergenicity must be addressed on an individual basis before recommending a formula as a substitute for cow's milk. Soy-based formula can also concomitant sensitize cow's milk allergy children to soy. Amino acid-based formulas have been studied from safety and nutritional efficacy perspectives. These formulas have been proposed for subjects highly sensitive to cow's milk protein and that cannot be managed using extensively hydolyzed formula and for children with multiple food allergies. In these conditions aminoacid based formulas are able to effectively cure allergic symptoms and to improve body growth.

NCT ID: NCT02087930 Recruiting - Cow Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Microbiota as Potential Target for Food Allergy

MATFA
Start date: March 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Food allergy (FA) derives from a dysregulation of oral tolerance mechanisms. Studies suggest a crucial role for enteric microflora in oral tolerance development. An altered composition of intestinal microflora results in an unbalanced local and systemic immune response to food allergens. There are qualitative and quantitative differences in gut microbiota composition in children with food allergy. These findings support the concept that specific beneficial bacteria from human intestinal microflora, designated probiotics, could restore intestinal microflora homeostasis and prevent or treat FA.

NCT ID: NCT02083471 Not yet recruiting - Cow's Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Cow's Milk and Hen's Egg Hyposensitization in Adults

Start date: April 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Egg, milk and cereal allergies are the most important food allergies in Finnish children, the prevalence in western countries is 1-4 %. In some individuals food-allergy is maintained in to adulthood. Recent studies suggest that specific oral tolerance induction (SOTI) provides a treatment option in children with continuing allergy with high success rates. The study aims at specific oral tolerance induction in adults allergic to cow's milk or hen's egg. Oral immunotherapy involves taking very small amounts of the allergen, and slowly increasing the amount. Consequently, an elimination diet may be wholly or partially cancelled, without the fear of serious allergic reactions. Another aim is to explore changes in antibody-mediated and cell-mediated immune response to individual components of cow's milk and egg allergens during tolerance induction and compare these with the effect of the treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02081651 Not yet recruiting - Cow's Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Parmigiano-Reggiano Cheese as a Possible Strategy to Acquire Oral Tolerance in Children With Cow's Milk Allergy

Start date: March 2014
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Cow's milk allergy is the most common food allergy in children. The scenery clinical and epidemiological of cow's milk allergy is significantly changed in the last decade. The severity of the clinical manifestations is still rising, and now cow's milk allergy has become the leading cause of hospitalization for food -induced anaphylaxis in our country. In addition, the overall prevalence of cow's milk allergy is increasing for a gradual reduction in the ability to acquire immunological tolerance to cow's milk protein in the first years of life. These mutations dictate the need to identify strategies to stimulate the acquisition of immunological tolerance in children affected by cow's milk allergy . The mechanisms of acquired immunological tolerance are not yet fully defined . The current view suggests the existence of a dynamic mechanism , consisting of various cellular compartments , which is set in a crucial environmental factors arising mainly from the diet and its effects on the intestinal microbiota. These acquisitions have contributed to the definition of a new concept in the field of human nutrition: immunonutrition. The immunonutrition is the ability, through the intake of specific nutrients on the immune system to interfere directly or indirectly through modulation of the composition and function of the intestinal microbiota. The proponent group has recently shown that it is possible to stimulate a more rapid acquisition of immunological tolerance in children affected by CMA through the administration of extensively hydrolysed casein containing the probiotic Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) (Berni Canani et al. J Pediatr 2013) . Several lines of evidence suggest that this effect is induced by a combination of direct immunomodulatory action exerted by some small peptides derived from the beta - casein and the action of lactobacillus GG. It 's well known that the Lactobacillus GG is able to adjust the composition and functions of the microbiota in the child with CMA and directly adjust some immunological mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of this condition. At the same time other groups have demonstrated the possibility that a high percentage of patients with IgE-mediated CMA is able to tolerate foods containing hydrolyzed cow's milk proteins with different processes. It has also been speculated that these strategies can facilitate the acquisition of immune tolerance in patients with cow's milk allergy. One of these foods is Parmigiano -Reggiano cheese, which is characterized by an ' extensive hydrolysis of the proteins in cow's milk , which degrade the caseins present and generate large amounts of peptides and free amino acids and by the presence of appreciable quantities of Lactobacillus GG in the samples to maturing higher . In a recent study it was shown that 58% of patients suffering from IgE-mediated CMA is able to tolerate a daily intake of normal amounts of this food , especially in the absence of a sensibilization to IgE specific to the beta lactoglobulin. These new findings allow us to hypothesize the use of Parmigiano REggiano cheese as a possible strategy immunonutrition can stimulate the acquisition of immune tolerance in patients with CMA .

NCT ID: NCT02062476 Recruiting - Cow's Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Epigenetic Effects Elicited By Lactobacillus GG In Children With Cow's Milk Allergy

Start date: July 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Lactobacillus GG (LGG) is able to exert long lasting effects in children with atopic disorders. We have shown that Nutramigen LGG accelerates tolerance acquisition in infants with cow's milk allergy (CMA). The mechanisms of these effects are still largely undefined. The effect of LGG could be related at least in part by the immunoregulatory role played by LGG. This probiotic can balance the generation of cytokines possibly involved in IgE- or non-IgE-mediated CMA (i.e., IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, IFN-γ , TGF-beta, and TNF-alfa), which can contribute to modulation of inflammatory processes. We have demonstrated that children with IgE-mediated CMA produce significantly higher level of IL-4 and IL-13 in response to cow's milk protein, and that tolerance is associated with a marked reduction of IL-13 production and a concomitant increased frequency of IFN-γ releasing cells. Epigenetics studies the heritable (and potentially reversible) changes of the genome inherited from one cell generation to the next which alter gene expression but do not involve changes in primary DNA sequences, highlighting the complexity of the inter-relationship between genetics and nutrition. There are three distinct, but closely interacting, epigenetic mechanisms (histone acetylation, DNA methylation, and non-coding microRNAs) that are responsible for modifying the expression of critical genes associated with physiologic and pathologic processes. The profile of epigenetic modifications associated with Th lineage commitment, coupled with the sensitivity of the early developmental period, has led to speculation that factors that disrupt these pathways may increase the risk of allergic diseases. Specifically, effects on DNA methylation and endogenous histone deacetylase inhibitors acting on specific pathways (Th1 and T regulatory cell differentiation) may favour Th2-associated allergic differentiation. MicroRNAs are another structural components of an epigenetic mechanism of post-transcriptional regulation of messenger RNA translation. It has been recently identified a specific Th2-associated miRNA (miR-21) that is critical for the regulation of Th cell polarization.

NCT ID: NCT01998074 Completed - Food Sensitivity Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Efficacy of a New Formula in Infants With Cow's Milk Protein Allergy

Paradice
Start date: n/a
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to show the efficacy, tolerance and nutritional adequacy of a newly developed hydrolyzed rice formula in infants with a proven cow's milk protein allergy.

NCT ID: NCT01968278 Recruiting - Cow's Milk Allergy Clinical Trials

Use of Baked Milk in Oral Immunotherapy for Severe IgE-mediated Cow's Milk Protein Allergic Patients

Start date: January 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Oral immunotherapy (OIT) programs for milk, egg and peanut, desensitize patients to their respective allergens and thereby decrease their risk of morbidity and mortality. OIT programs, however, are not without adverse events, particularly in highly sensitive patients. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the administration of baked milk (BM) products to IgE-CMA patients that are non-reactive to BM, can promote tolerance to unheated milk (UM). The goal of our research is to determine whether BM can promote desensitization even in the highly sensitive patient, who reacts to baked milk as well. In a second step, we hypothesize BM-OIT will promote desensitization to unheated milk, as well. Importance: The change in the risk/benefit ratio of such a program will alter the therapeutic approach to an IgE-CMP allergic patient. Probable implications to Medicine: BM-OIT will allow highly sensitive patients to tolerate milk products, decreasing their risk of life-threatening reactions. Furthermore, analysis of the immune modulation parameters that change during the treatment program, should pave the way for defining mechanisms underlying tolerance in CMP allergy.