Back to Search Start Over

Epicutaneous immunotherapy with Viaskin ™ Peanut in toddlers: a plain language summary.

Authors :
Stukus DR
Gupta R
Mack D
Mandelbaum L
Siri D
Hernandez-Trujillo V
Sampson HA
Source :
Immunotherapy [Immunotherapy] 2024 Jan; Vol. 16 (1), pp. 5-13. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Dec 19.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

What Is This Summary About?: This is a summary of an article published in The New England Journal of Medicine about the EPITOPE clinical study, which tested a skin patch called ViaskinTM Peanut 250 μg (micrograms) as a treatment option for peanut allergy in children aged 1 through 3 years. The patch is a form of epicutaneous immunotherapy (EPIT), which is a new approach to allergen immunotherapy that delivers a small amount of peanut protein to the immune system through the skin. Viaskin Peanut is an investigational therapy, meaning it has not yet been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), that has been studied before in young children aged 4 through 11 years. In those studies, the children who received the patch were desensitized and were less likely to experience anaphylaxis when they ate peanut at the end of the study. The EPITOPE study included children aged 1 through 3 years with peanut allergy and looked at how well the peanut patch worked and how safe it was compared to a patch with no medicine (placebo, no medicine) after 12 months.<br />What Were the Key Takeaways?: The study showed that the peanut patch was better in desensitizing children to peanuts than the placebo patch. Most of the children in the study who received the peanut patch for 12 months (the treatment group) were able to eat and tolerate more peanut at the end of the study than those who received only the placebo patch (the control group). This demonstrates that the children in the treatment group were less likely to have an allergic reaction if they ate peanut by accident at the end of the study. The children in the treatment group also had less severe symptoms when they were given peanut during the oral food challenges at the end of the study. Most children in both groups experienced side effects. Mild to moderate local skin reactions where the patch was applied were most common. These side effects happened less often and were less serious over the 12-month treatment period.<br />What Were the Main Conclusions Reported by the Researchers?: Overall, these results show the peanut patch may be a possible treatment option to help desensitize young children with peanut allergy to peanut.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1750-7448
Volume :
16
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Immunotherapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38112107
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2217/imt-2023-0201