The Hamilton Spectator

Clinic tackles children’s food allergies

- VICKY FRAGASSO-MARQUIS

MONTREAL — In the coming months, dozens of children with food allergies will begin a treatment to desensitiz­e them to their allergens as part of a pilot project at Montreal’s Sainte-Justine hospital.

Oral immunother­apy involves consuming small portions of the food they’re allergic to each day.

The amount is gradually increased, with the goal of bettering the patient’s quality of life and decreasing the risk of an allergic reaction if they accidental­ly consume the wrong foods. The success rate is around 70 to 80 per cent, according to a researcher in the field.

“When you go out to the restaurant, or out with friends or to school, let’s say your dose of sensitizat­ion is four peanuts a day, you won’t have an accident (if you consume) something with traces or with a peanut,” says Philippe Begin, an allergist-immunologi­st.

In certain cases, the desensitiz­ation can become permanent.

“There are some who are able to stop taking the treatment and the responsive­ness doesn’t come back,” Begin said Sunday at a conference hosted by the hospital. “That’s great when it happens, but at the moment we don’t know who will experience this benefit.”

Begin said the goal of the clinic is not to do research, but rather to make the treatment more available and eventually transfer the knowledge to other health centres.

The clinic hopes to ultimately treat about 775 patients.

Oral immunother­apy is much more common at private clinics in the United States than in Quebec, where the public health system doesn’t necessaril­y have the resources for such treatment.

The organizati­on Bye Bye Allergies raised $780,000 to open the centre at Sainte-Justine, with the Quebec government contributi­ng about the same amount.

Bye Bye Allergy’s president said it’s eventual goal was to make the treatment available across the province.

“There are 60,000 allergic children in Quebec, and not all families have access to this treatment,” Sophie Beugnot said. “They’re found in all the regions of Quebec, not just the greater Montreal area.”

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