Scottish Daily Mail

At last! A jab to help ‘cure’ peanut allergy

- By PAT HAGAN

ANEW drug could banish peanut allergies within weeks of being administer­ed. In a trial, people who had been in danger of lifethreat­ening reactions to traces of peanut could eat a whole one just a fortnight after an injection.

Scientists who developed the drug predict some patients may need only a single treatment to end the allergy altogether, while others may need a top-up jab every few months to keep it at bay.

Etokimab targets a part of the immune system involved in severe allergic responses. Researcher­s hope it may also work against other serious food allergies, such as milk and shellfish, as well as tree nuts.

About one in 100 people in the UK has a peanut allergy, and it typically begins before the age of two. When the immune system comes into contact with any peanut protein, it mistakenly treats it as a threat and releases a rush of chemicals including Immunoglob­ulin E, an antibody designed to rid the body of what it considers a dangerous invader.

This triggers the symptoms of an allergic reaction, often within seconds. These range from an itchy mouth to anaphylact­ic shock — where the airways narrow, blood pressure plummets and major organs rapidly shut down.

Currently, the only treatment to ‘cure’ the allergy involves desensitis­ation, where patients under close medical supervisio­n are fed gradually increasing quantities of peanut protein until their immune system has learned to stop overreacti­ng to it.

But an estimated 15 per cent experience anaphylact­ic shock during the process. It can also take up to two years of hospital visits every few months, and only a handful of NHS centres offer the treatment.

The new jab seems to work in only two weeks in about twothirds of patients.

Etokimab was initially developed to treat eczema, but clinical trials found it had no great benefit. Scientists also tested its effect on peanut allergy as it is known to interfere with the interleuki­n-33 molecule, which helps trigger the chemical rush that causes serious reactions.

Fifteen adults with severe peanut allergies were given one injection of etokimab, while five others were given a dummy jab. Two weeks later, all were asked to eat 275mg of peanut protein — the same amount that’s contained within a nut.

The results, published in the medical journal JCI Insight, showed 11 of the 15 on etokimab avoided a serious reaction, while all on the dummy drug needed adrenaline jabs.

The team, at Stanford University in California, is now planning larger studies with different food allergies.

Professor Adam Fox, a consultant in paediatric allergy at Evelina London Children’s Hospital, said: ‘This is exciting and credible research.’

 ??  ?? GIVING children antihistam­ines and probiotics when undergoing desensitis­ation to a peanut allergy can increase success rates, a review found. Researcher­s at the University of Adelaide, in Australia, examined 27 studies involving 1,500 children and concluded the combinatio­n led to a 10 per cent increase in the number of patients able to tolerate the treatment. In the journal Scientific Reports, the lead researcher said the ‘slight’ modificati­on could ‘substantia­lly’ improve the treatment’s safety, but it is not yet known why.
GIVING children antihistam­ines and probiotics when undergoing desensitis­ation to a peanut allergy can increase success rates, a review found. Researcher­s at the University of Adelaide, in Australia, examined 27 studies involving 1,500 children and concluded the combinatio­n led to a 10 per cent increase in the number of patients able to tolerate the treatment. In the journal Scientific Reports, the lead researcher said the ‘slight’ modificati­on could ‘substantia­lly’ improve the treatment’s safety, but it is not yet known why.

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