Maximum dose food challenges reveal transient sustained unresponsiveness in peanut oral immunotherapy (POIMD Study)

CM Davis, A Anagnostou, S Devaraj, DT Vita… - The Journal of Allergy …, 2022 - Elsevier
CM Davis, A Anagnostou, S Devaraj, DT Vita, F Rivera, K Pitts, M Hearrell, C Minard…
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, 2022Elsevier
Background The maximum tolerated dose of peanut protein following peanut oral
immunotherapy (POIT) is unknown because most research studies have not examined very
high thresholds. Objective To define the maximum dose tolerated by patients on POIT and
severity of allergic reactions after a 1-month period of treatment discontinuation. Methods In
a phase 2 3-year POIT open-label study, we enrolled participants age 5 to 13 years with a 1-
year build-up period followed by a 2-year daily maintenance dose of 3900 mg with …
Background
The maximum tolerated dose of peanut protein following peanut oral immunotherapy (POIT) is unknown because most research studies have not examined very high thresholds.
Objective
To define the maximum dose tolerated by patients on POIT and severity of allergic reactions after a 1-month period of treatment discontinuation.
Methods
In a phase 2 3-year POIT open-label study, we enrolled participants age 5 to 13 years with a 1-year build-up period followed by a 2-year daily maintenance dose of 3900 mg with assessment of the maximum tolerated dose using double-blind placebo-controlled food challenges (DBPCFCs) of 26,225 mg cumulative dose of peanut protein. The DBPCFC was performed at baseline, after 12-month build-up, at 2 year of maintenance, and after a 1-month period of treatment discontinuation. Biomarkers were assessed every 6 weeks for the first 6 months of therapy. A general linear mixed model was used for analysis.
Results
The mean maximum cumulative tolerated dose after 12 months increased by 12,063 mg (P < .001) (n = 12), slightly decreased during maintenance (n = 11), and significantly decreased by 7593 mg after avoidance for 1 month (P = .03) (n = 6). Biomarker analysis revealed decreases in cytokine expression within the first 6 weeks of initiation of POIT and decreased peanut-IgG4 and increased cytokine expression after 1 month of discontinuation. The DBPCFC reaction severity, examined through a symptom score with 1 point for each defined symptom, decreased after 12 months, but did not significantly change after 1 month of POIT discontinuation.
Conclusions
The evaluation of POIT and sustained unresponsiveness by maximum tolerated dose by DBPCFCs in this small phase 2 trial showed that desensitization is diminished, with 100% loss of tolerated dose after 1 month of avoidance following 3 years of treatment.
Elsevier