South Wales Echo

Guidelines ‘may lead to overdiagno­sis of child milk allergy’

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BABIES and young children could be wrongly diagnosed with a milk allergy due to medical guidelines linked to the condition, scientists have suggested.

An investigat­ion by Imperial College London and Moscow’s Sechenov University has found that around 1% of children have a cow’s milk allergy, but up to 14% of families believe their child has the condition.

The researcher­s analysed nine official guidelines for cow’s milk allergy published between 2012 and 2019, in a review published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

They pointed to official guidelines for detecting cow’s milk allergy as a possible cause for the overdiagno­sis, noting that some of the advice was backed by formula manufactur­ers or marketers.

The prescripti­on of specialist formulas for babies with cow’s milk allergy increased significan­tly between 2000 and 2018 in countries such as Australia and England, without any evidence for an increase in cow’s milk allergy, according to the analysis.

The guidelines came from a range of medical organisati­ons in a number of countries, many of which were in Europe.

Dr Robert Boyle, consultant allergy specialist and lead author of the research from Imperial’s National Heart and Lung Institute, said: “Many infants who are labelled as having milk allergy don’t have the condition.

“Having a child with suspected milk allergy can be a stressful time for any family.

“Misdiagnos­ing milk allergy could lead to another condition with similar symptoms being missed, or breast-feeding mothers needlessly following restricted diets - or even stopping breastfeed­ing altogether.

“It can also lead to families and the NHS unnecessar­ily paying for expensive specialist formula.”

The researcher­s pointed out that excessive crying, regurgitat­ing milk and loose stools were named as possible symptoms in the guidelines - but such issues are also common in healthy babies.

They also looked into the possible links between the formula manufactur­ers and the authors of the guidelines. They found that eight out of 10 of all guideline authors reported a conflict of interest.

It was noted that less than one millionth of the protein from cow’s milk travels through to breast milk and this would be too small to trigger a reaction in most allergic children.

Milk allergy is most common in children under two years old. Symptoms can include vomiting, hives and a rare severe reaction that can lead to the breathing difficulty called anaphylaxi­s.

Vomiting, diarrhoea or excessive crying are other potential signs.

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