View clinical trials related to Peanut Hypersensitivity.
Filter by:People who are undergoing oral immunotherapy for food allergy treatment can feel anxious about the treatment process, particularly when they have allergic responses (e.g., hives, vomiting, nausea) during the dosing process. People may commonly believe that these symptoms are simply side effects that must be endured or avoided. However, the investigators propose that changing participants' mindsets about the meaning of symptoms—toward viewing them as a sign that the treatment is working and desensitization is increasing—during the treatment process will reduce anxiety and improve treatment outcomes.
The study aims to assess the biological potency of the In-House Reference Preparation (IHRP) of peanut allergens extract by a quantitative Skin Prick Test (SPT) method in peanut-allergic subjects.
This study is enrolling participants by invitation only. This is an open-label, safety extension study for subjects who participated in the ARC007 study.
The purpose of this study is to assess AR101's safety, tolerability and efficacy over an extended dosing period.
The purpose of this trial is to study the safety of rescue peanut oral immunotherapy followed by the introduction of dietary peanut for patients with peanut allergy who have lost desensitization during a peanut immunotherapy trial.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy and safety of AR101 through oral immunotherapy (OIT) in peanut-allergic children.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled safety study of AR101 using the characterized oral desensitization immunotherapy (CODIT™) regimen in peanut-allergic children.
Open label, cross-over, local pharmacokinetics study of a sublingual film with peanut extract in healthy adults and children
The recent finding that early introduction of peanut can prevent ~70-90% of peanut allergy is a major step towards prevention of food allergy. However, because that finding was from a clinical trial in a very select population, there are several major questions that must be answered in order to implement these findings into clinical practice without causing more harm than good. These questions include who, if anyone, should be screened prior to early introduction for peanut allergy, how this screening should be done, and what quantity of peanut ingestion is needed to prevent peanut allergy. The goal of this project is to answer these critical questions so that the potential of these recent findings can be realized. To that end, 400 infants at high-risk of peanut allergy will be enrolled. These infants will be given a peanut skin prick test, peanut food challenge and have blood drawn for measurement of peanut IgE, and then will be followed for assessment of peanut consumption and development of peanut allergy until 3 years of age.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of AR101 through oral immunotherapy (OIT) in peanut-allergic children and adults who have completed the ARC003 study.