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Detection and management of milk allergy: Delphi consensus study

Authors :
Hilary I. Allen
Ursula Pendower
Miriam Santer
Marion Groetch
Mitchell Cohen
Simon H. Murch
Hywel C. Williams
Daniel Munblit
Yitzhak Katz
Neeraj Gupta
Sabeen Adil
Justine Baines
Eefje G. P. M. de Bont
Matthew Ridd
Victoria L. Sibson
Alison McFadden
Jennifer J. Koplin
Josephine Munene
Michael R. Perkin
Scott H. Sicherer
Robert J. Boyle
Family Medicine
RS: CAPHRI - R5 - Optimising Patient Care
Source :
Allen, H I, Pendower, U, Santer, M, Groetch, M, Cohen, M, Murch, S H, Williams, H C, Ridd, M J & Boyle, R J 2022, ' Detection and management of milk allergy : Delphi consensus study ', Clinical and Experimental Allergy, vol. 52, no. 7, pp. 848-858 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.14179, Clinical and Experimental Allergy, 52(7), 848-858. Wiley-Blackwell
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundThere is significant overdiagnosis of milk allergy in young children in some countries, leading to unnecessary use of specialized formula. This guidance, developed by experts without commercial ties to the formula industry, aims to reduce milk allergy overdiagnosis and support carers of children with suspected milk allergy.MethodsDelphi study involving two rounds of anonymous consensus building and an open meeting between January and July 2021. Seventeen experts in general practice, nutrition, midwifery, health visiting, lactation support and relevant areas of paediatrics participated, located in Europe, North America, Middle East, Africa, Australia and Asia. Five authors of previous milk allergy guidelines and seven parents provided feedback.FindingsParticipants agreed on 38 essential recommendations through consensus. Recommendations highlighted the importance of reproducibility and specificity for diagnosing milk allergy in children with acute or delayed symptoms temporally related to milk protein ingestion; and distinguished between children directly consuming milk protein and exclusively breastfed infants. Consensus was reached that maternal dietary restriction is not usually necessary to manage milk allergy, and that for exclusively breastfed infants with chronic symptoms, milk allergy diagnosis should only be considered in specific, rare circumstances. Consensus was reached that milk allergy diagnosis does not need to be considered for stool changes, aversive feeding or occasional spots of blood in stool, if there is no temporal relationship with milk protein ingestion. When compared with previous guidelines, these consensus recommendations resulted in more restrictive criteria for detecting milk allergy and a more limited role for maternal dietary exclusions and specialized formula.InterpretationThese new milk allergy recommendations from non-conflicted, multidisciplinary experts advise narrower criteria, more prominent support for breastfeeding and less use of specialized formula, compared with current guidelines.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09547894 and 13652222
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Allen, H I, Pendower, U, Santer, M, Groetch, M, Cohen, M, Murch, S H, Williams, H C, Ridd, M J & Boyle, R J 2022, ' Detection and management of milk allergy : Delphi consensus study ', Clinical and Experimental Allergy, vol. 52, no. 7, pp. 848-858 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.14179, Clinical and Experimental Allergy, 52(7), 848-858. Wiley-Blackwell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a4d5a625f35fa828acd1e7d35e19c1f7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.14179