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Colorado Chapter Meeting American Academy of Pediatrics May 8, 2015 Food Allergy in the Trenches Dan Atkins, MD Chief, Allergy Section Co-Director, Gastrointestinal Eosinophilic Diseases Program Children’s Hospital Colorado Associate Professor of Pediatrics University of Colorado School of Medicine ! Disclosures • APFED: Medical Advisory Panel member • DBV Technologies: Consultant, member of Data Safety Monitoring Board for the study entitled: “A DBPC Randomized Trial to Study the Viaskin Milk Efficacy and Safety for Treating IgEmediated Cow’s Milk Allergy in Children” • Regeneron: Consultant, single episode Learning Objectives 1. Distinguish IgE from non-IgE mediated food allergies and illustrate how each type commonly presents to the PCP’s office. 2. Develop a practical approach to the evaluation and management of a child brought for a suspected IgEmediated food allergy including important components of the history, typical clinical presentations, the role of skin testing and serum food specific IgE testing, counseling points and when to refer to an allergist. 3. Educate parents about prevention strategies regarding the introduction of solid foods. 1 Resource References 1. Sicherer SH & Sampson HA. Food Allergy: Epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2014;133:291-307. 2. Bird, JA, et al. Clinical management of food allergy. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract 2015;3:1-11. 3. Sampson HA, et al. Food allergy: A practice parameter update 2014. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2014;134:116-125. 4. Caubet JC, et al. Clinical features and resolution of food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome: 10 year experience. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2014; 134:382-9. COMMON QUESTIONS • Is my child allergic to (specific food) or will my child have a reaction if she/he eats (specific food)? ?? ? ? • Will the next reaction to the food be similar to previous reactions, less severe or worse? • Could (will) my child die from an allergic reaction to the food? Oatmeal Studios • Will or has my child outgrown her/his allergy to the food? ADVERSE FOOD REACTION IMMUNE MEDIATED (FOOD ALLERGY) - IgE - Non-IgE - Mixed IgE & non IgE - Cell Mediated NON-IMMUNE MEDIATED (FOOD INTOLERANCE) - Toxic - Metabolic - Pharmacologic - Idiosyncratic - Other J ALLERGY CLIN IMMUNOL 2010:126:S1-S58 2 SUSPECTED FOODS • Route of exposure – Ingestion Contact Inhalation Inhalation reactions: Peanut dust- possible Peanut butter- doubtful Injection • Amount ingested – Minute Small Medium Large • Manner of preparation – Raw – Plain Cooked Spices Both Mixed with other foods Which dye is capable of causing IgE-mediated reactions? Preservatives Dyes • Simultaneously ingested foods – None Few Multiple • Illness in others ingesting the same food In which condition will skin testing yourself to a fresh extract of the offending food make the diagnosis? • Review of current diet – Which of the simultaneously ingested foods have been eaten again without reaction? – Patients are sometimes eating the food to which they think they are allergic as an ingredient in another food. DESCRIPTION OF REACTIONS • Timing of onset in relation to food ingestion • Symptoms • Severity • Duration of reaction • Treatment of reaction • Reproducibility of reaction after ingestion of suspected food • Most recent reaction Duration of Reactions • Dose, emesis, treatment • Mild to moderate reactions are usually hours long • Biphasic reactions are rare, but concerning • Prolonged reactions are extremely rare • Hives lasting for days are rarely food-driven without other evidence to suggest food as the cause Reasons for lack of reproducibility • Not IgE-mediated food allergy • Focused on wrong food as cause • Cross contamination with another food • Food allergen denatured by cooking • Added spice rather than the food • Need another trigger such as exercise FOOD ALLERGY: DIAGNOSTIC TOOLBOX HISTORY LABORATORY Skin testing: Commercial and/or Fresh extracts PHYSICAL EXAM PROCEDURES CONSULTATIONS Allergist Food Challenges Ingestion Dietician Inhalation Contact Gastroenterologist Elimination diet ImmunoCAP Patch testing Other Impedance/pH probe Feeding therapist Endoscopy Psychosocial Clinician Other Other 3 DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO THE EVALUATION OF FOOD ALLERGY Detailed History + Non-IgE-mediated Food Protein Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome (FPIES) • Irritability, vomiting and diarrhea • Occult blood in stool Endoscopy + - Food Protein Induced Enteropathy • Diarrhea, failure to thrive, abdominal distention, early satiety, malabsorption • Less frequent anemia, edema, & hypoproteinemia Reconsider Elimination Diet + - Reconsider - Food Challenge + Reconsider Specific Allergen Elimination Diet Food Protein Induced Proctitis (Allergic Proctocolitis) • Gross blood in stool + other symptoms Celiac Disease • Diarrhea, steatorrhea, malabsorption, abdominal distention, flatulence, + nausea & vomiting, failure to thrive, oral ulcers • Associated skin disease: dermatitis herpetiformis Sampson HA JACI 103:981-9, 1999 DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO THE EVALUATION OF FOOD ALLERGY Detailed History + IgE & Non-IgE-mediated Allergic Eosinophilic Esophagitis,Gastritis, Gastroenteritis • Postprandial vomiting, early satiety, anorexia, abdominal pain, hematemesis, steatorrhea, failure to thrive, weight loss & gastric outlet obstruction • Subset with food-induced IgE-mediated reactions Eosinophilic Esophagitis - Endoscopy + Infant Reconsider - Elimination Diet + Reconsider - Food Challenge + Reconsider Specific Allergen Elimination Diet Adult • Feeding aversion or intolerance • Failure to thrive • Vomiting • Epigastric or chest pain • Dysphagia • Food impaction Sampson HA JACI 103:981-9, 1999 IMMEDIATE HYPERSENSITIVITY Symptoms • Cutaneous • Flushing, hives, angioedema, eczema • GI • Oropharyngeal pruritus and edema, abdominal cramping, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea • Pulmonary • Rhinitis, laryngeal edema, wheezing, coughing & shortness of breath • Cardiovascular • Hypotension, tachycardia, arrhythmias • Neurological • Loss of consciousness • Behavioral • Irritability (preceding or in combination with other symptoms) 4 JACI cover July 2003 LINEAR VS CONFORMATIONAL EPITOPES Sampson HA. JACI 113:805-19, 2004 Food Allergen Cross-Reactivity 5 DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO THE EVALUATION OF FOOD ALLERGY Detailed History & Physical + + + IgE-mediated IgE & Non-IgE-mediated Non-IgE-mediated PST or ImmunoCAP - GI Consultation/Endoscopy + + Reconsider - Reconsider Elimination Diet - Reconsider + Food Challenge + Specific Allergen Elimination Diet - Reconsider Sampson HA JACI 103:981-9, 1999 Audience Response 1 A woman in the first trimester of her first pregnancy calls to ask your advice about her diet because both she and her husband have allergic rhinitis and were allergic to milk as infants. Which of the following would you suggest? A. Avoid the major allergenic foods (milk, egg, wheat, soy, peanuts, tree nuts, fish and shellfish) during the remainder of her pregnancy. B. Eat her usual diet, but avoid milk, peanuts and tree nuts during the last trimester of her pregnancy. C. Eat her usual diet. Avoidance diets during pregnancy are not currently recommended. Case 1: Allan History: • Both parents have seasonal allergic rhinitis and were allergic to milk as infants • Term delivery by emergency C-section – Birth weight 7 lbs 15 ounces • Breast fed – Supplemented with Baby’s Only Organic Dairy Formula • No colic, growing, thriving • 3 months old - developed a mild eczematous rash 6 Audience Response 2 Is Allan at high risk for the development of allergic disease? A. Yes B. No C. Need more information in order to decide Audience Response 3 Allan is 4 months old. His mother brings him in to ask your recommendations for food introduction. Which of the following would you recommend? A. Continue breast feeding and start adding in complementary foods. Because he is high risk delay introduction of the highly allergenic foods as follows: dairy at 1 yr; egg at 2 yrs; peanuts, tree nuts, fish and shellfish at 3 yrs. B. Continue breast feeding and add in complementary foods 1 at a time every 3 to 5 days. After a few are tolerated, allergenic foods can be added in the same fashion at home (not day care or a restaurant). Background • 2000 – American Academy of Pediatrics • Milk – 1 year • Egg – 2 years • Peanuts, tree nuts, fish & shellfish – 3 years • 2008 – American Academy of Pediatrics • No longer sufficient evidence to support delayed introduction of allergenic foods 7 DUAL-ALLERGEN EXPOSURE HYPOTHESIS Lack G. JACI 2008;121:1331-6 JACI: In Practice 2013;1:29-36 Summary of Recommendations: • Avoidance diets – Currently not recommended during pregnancy and lactation • Breast-feeding – Exclusive breast feeding is recommended for 4-6 months • To possibly reduce the incidence of atopic dermatitis in the first 2 years of life • To reduce the incidence of cow’s milk allergy in the first two years of life • To reduce early onset wheezing before 4 years of age JACI: In Practice 2013;1:29-36 • Selection of infant formula – For infants at increased risk of allergic disease who cannot be exclusively breast-fed for the first 4 – 6 months of life, hydrolyzed formula appears to offer advantages to prevent allergic disease and cow’s milk allergy. – There is no substantial evidence that soy formula prevents atopic disease. – There may be a slight benefit of an eHF over a pHF, but the data are not conclusive. – Studies of amino-acid based formulas for the primary prevention of allergic disease are lacking. 8 JACI: In Practice 2013;1:29-36 • Introduction of complementary foods – Complementary foods can be introduced between 4 & 6 months of age – No current data are available to suggest that cow’s milk protein (except for whole cow’s milk), egg, soy, wheat, peanuts, tree nuts, fish and shellfish introduction into the diet need to be delayed beyond 4-6 months of age. – Highly allergenic foods can be introduced once a few complementary foods are tolerated first. They should be introduced at home. JACI: In Practice 2013;1:29-36 • Refer to an allergist for testing before the introduction of highly allergenic foods if the patient… – Has had an allergic reaction to a food – Is suspected of having an underlying food allergy – Has difficult to control moderate to severe atopic dermatitis Questions from the Trenches • How do the AAP and AAAI statements around food introduction conflict, and how can they be reconciled? • What are the current recommendations around lactation and food avoidance? What about during pregnancy? • What are the current theories as to why food sensitization occurs? What role does this child’s eczema play? FH? • Are there foods that should continue to be avoided in the first year of life or under certain circumstances. • Can you comment on the recent NEJM study regarding early introduction of peanuts and the implications for practitioners? 9 Case 1: Allan History cont’d: • 5 months old – tolerated first oatmeal feeding • 1 week later – fed different brand of oatmeal – 3 hours later – vomited 6 times and a couple of hours later had several loose stools • Several days later – fed oatmeal again with similar reaction (timing and symptoms) • Waited 2 weeks, gave oatmeal again – 3 hours later vomiting, pale & lethargic – Recovered after 3 hours • Oatmeal removed from his diet Audience Response 4 Allan’s mother brings him after his third reaction to oatmeal. She asks your opinion about the cause of the reactions? Which of the following would you tell her? A. The family history of allergies, his atopic dermatitis, and the reproducibility and timing of reactions suggest this is an IgE-mediated oat allergy. B. The symptoms, reproducibility and delayed timing of the reaction are consistent with FPIES to oats. C. Oats rarely cause allergic reactions. This is most likely an oat intolerance that will resolve by the time he is a year old. FOOD PROTEIN-INDUCED ENTEROCOLITIS SYNDROME (FPIES) What is FPIES? FPIES is a non-IgE-mediated food allergy that usually presents in young infants and manifests as profuse repetitive vomiting and lethargy, typically occurring 2 to 4 hours after ingestion of the offending allergen and occasionally followed by diarrhea several hours later. Caubet JC, et al, JACI 2014;134:382-9 10 FOOD TRIGGERS OF FPIES Caubet JC, et al, JACI 2014;134:382-9 FOOD PROTEIN-INDUCED ENTEROCOLITIS SYNDROME (FPIES) Key Features • Onset in infancy • • • • 60% male Occurs usually in formula-fed, not breast-fed infants Tolerate breast milk and extensively hydrolyzed formulas Allergy to both milk and soy occurs in ~ 50%, may involve other foods • History of allergic disease • Family: atopy 75%, food allergy 20% • Personal: atopic dermatitis 25%, asthma/rhinitis 20% Sicherer S. JACI 2005;115:149 FOOD PROTEIN-INDUCED ENTEROCOLITIS SYNDROME (FPIES) Key Features • Skin tests & serum food-specific IgE levels are classically negative • Clinical course: resolution between 2 - 5 years of age • Two clinical patterns: • Chronic exposure • Acute exposure after period of avoidance Maloney J, Nowak-Wegryzn A. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2007;18:360-7 11 FOOD PROTEIN-INDUCED ENTEROCOLITIS SYNDROME (FPIES) Chronic exposure pattern • Symptoms/lab findings – – – – – – – – Vomiting Diarrhea (blood, reducing substances positive) Lethargy Failure to thrive Dehydration Hypotension Methemoglobinemia Maloney J, Nowak-Wegryzn A. Pediatr Hypoalbuminemia Allergy Immunol 2007;18:360-7 FOOD PROTEIN-INDUCED ENTEROCOLITIS SYNDROME (FPIES) Acute exposure after avoidance pattern • Symptoms/lab findings – – – – – Onset of vomiting: ~ 2 hours after ingestion Onset of diarrhea: ~ 5 hours after ingestion Lethargy Elevated neutrophil count ~ 15% progress to hypotension, acidemia, methemoglobinemia Maloney J, Nowak-Wegryzn A. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2007;18:360-7 FOOD PROTEIN-INDUCED ENTEROCOLITIS SYNDROME (FPIES) • Diagnosis – Typical clinical pattern with negative skin tests – Need for food challenge determined on clinical grounds • Treatment • • • • • • Eliminate offending food, symptoms resolve If food ingested, proceed to medical care Treat acute reactions with vigorous IV hydration, ondansetron Epinephrine and antihistamine not helpful Typically resolves by 4-5 years of age Reintroduction of food under physician supervision with IV access Sicherer S. JACI 2005;115:149 12 Case: Allan • You are seeing him for a 9 month old visit. He has eczema and the parents are wondering if it could be secondary to food allergies. The family has been uncomfortable with the topical steroid prescribed for them at the last visit and they try their best to apply daily lubricant but admit compliance is challenging. The family is requesting food allergy testing. ARS #5 You recommend the following: 1) ImmunoCAP food panel testing and if anything is positive, then food avoidance and allergy referral. 2) Refer this child to an allergist for skin testing in conjunction with ImmunoCAP testing. 3) Recommend improved skin care to get this child’s skin under control, and do not do food allergy testing at this time. Questions from the Trenches • What is the role of ImmunoCAP testing to foods in this situation? How reliable is it in predicting food allergies. What is the Choose Wisely Campaign and what is the recommendation in this situation? • Which infant with eczema really needs to see an allergist in the first year of life? What is the likelihood of food allergies in this patient? 13 Case 1: Allan History cont’d: • 12 months old, still breast fed - has persistent mild to moderate atopic dermatitis • On a Sunday morning his mother fed him about 1/10 tsp of peanut butter at home. Within 5 minutes he became irritable, vomited and developed a few perioral hives. His mother gave him a dose of diphenhydramine. He calmed down and recovered uneventfully, without further symptoms. • The next morning she called and brought him to your office for evaluation. Audience Response 6 Allan looks fine in your office the next morning except for a mild eczema flare. He has not eaten other nuts. Which of the following would you do? A. Educate about peanut and tree nut avoidance and refer him to an allergist. B. Educate about peanut and tree nut avoidance. Give an Epipen Jr prescription and a Food Allergy Action Plan. Order an ImmunoCAP to peanut and common tree nuts. Tell her you will consider referral to an allergist when he is older and skin tests are more reliable. C. Educate about peanut and tree nut avoidance. Give EpiPen Jr prescription & FAAP. Refer to an allergist. Questions from the Trenches • If this child came into see you right after the ingestion, would • • • • • epinephrine have been indicated? What are the indications for epinephrine? What are best in office strategies after ingestion? Is an ImmunoCAP test helpful acutely in this situation? How does the ImmunoCAP value help you and what do you tell this family about the natural course of this particular allergy? Should the family be instructed to not feed this child any nuts? Does this child need to see an allergist? What advice do you give this family around precautions and preventing accidental exposures in the daycare environment? What are the indications for an oral challenge in the future? 14 Case 1: Allan History cont’d: • Allan was seen by an allergist – Skin testing was performed to selected food allergens – Positive skin tests to egg (6x4), peanut (11x10), sesame (10x10) – Negative skin tests to milk, tree nuts, oat, wheat, soy, fish mix and shrimp – ImmunoCAPs ordered: egg white 10.6, peanut 6.82, sesame 0.69 – Use of auto-injectable epinephrine, Food Allergy Action Plan and treatment of reactions reviewed – Egg, peanut and sesame removed from diet – Education regarding avoidance provided • Atopic dermatitis improved ARS 7 Which one of the following statements is false? A. Skin tests and ImmunoCAPs predict the severity of future reactions upon exposure to a food. B. Skin tests and immunoCAPs predict the likelihood of reacting upon exposure to a food. C. If the history is convincing and the immunoCAP is negative, performing a skin test to the food is indicated. D. If the history is convincing and the skin test and immunoCAP are negative, a careful oral food challenge under medical supervision, rather than eating the food at home is the preferred approach. SENSITIZATION VS CLINICAL REACTIVITY • Sensitization • Presence of food-specific IgE detected by skin testing or in vitro testing (FEIA) • Overestimates prevalence • Clinical reactivity • Evidence of symptoms upon exposure to a food • History • Challenge 15 DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO THE EVALUATION OF FOOD ALLERGY Detailed History Epicutaneous skin testing + • Glycerinated commercial extracts 1:10 or 1:20 weight/volume • Consider freshly prepared extracts for fruits and vegetables or if no commercial extract IgE-mediated + - PST and/or ImmunoCAP • Applied by prick or puncture technique – Intradermal technique is not recommended • Positive predictive accuracy – Less than 50% (many “false” positives) • Negative predictive accuracy – Greater than 95% (few “false” negatives) + Reconsider - Elimination Diet + Reconsider - Food Challenge + Reconsider Select skin tests based on history and major foods known to cause symptoms. Specific Allergen Elimination Diet Sampson HA JACI 103:981-9, 1999 Summary Statement 23: The clinician should use specific IgE tests to foods as diagnostic tools; however, testing should be focused on foods suspected of provoking the reaction, and test results alone should not be considered diagnostic of food allergy. PRICK SKIN TESTING Sporik R,et al, Clin Exp Allergy 2000; 30: 1540-6 – 467 infants and children (median age 3 yrs) referred to center over 9 yrs (1989-98) – Prick skin testing to milk, egg, peanut – 555 open food challenges • Results – Positive challenge was always seen when SPT was above a certain size • Milk & Peanut > 8 mm • Egg > 7 mm – In children < 2 yrs SPT sizes were smaller • Milk > 6 mm • Egg > 5 mm • Peanut > 4 mm 16 Skin prick testing (SPT) • • • • • Safe and useful for diagnosis of IgE-mediated food allergy Reagents and methods are not standardized Use of large panels is discouraged Intradermal testing not indicated Positive SPT correlates with the presence of allergen-specificIgE bound to the surface of cutaneous mast cells. • Compared with oral food challenges they have low specificity and low positive predictive value for making an initial diagnosis of FA. • Wheal size has not been correlated to disease severity. • The larger the mean wheal provoked, the more likely that a food allergen will be of clinical relevance. Skin prick testing (SPT) • In children at high risk skin testing may be considered before introduction of certain foods. • In a cohort of infants with milk and/or egg allergy 69% were sensitized to peanut. • When diagnosing OAS, or in cases where SPT with commercial extracts do not correlate with the clinical histories, the SPT technique with fresh or native foods, especially fruits and vegetables, may prove more sensitive. (fresh fruits can be frozen an reused) • Skin test sizes vary with age, skin test location, device and extract used. • Negative skin test in face of highly suggestive history- consider medically supervised food challenge DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO THE EVALUATION OF FOOD ALLERGY Detailed History + IgE-mediated + - PST or ImmunoCAP + Reconsider Dx Elimination Diet + Reconsider Dx - Food Challenge + Reconsider Dx Specific Allergen Elimination Diet Sampson HA JACI 103:981-9, 1999 17 Allergen-specific serum IgE • Useful for diagnosis of IgE-mediated food allergy, but not diagnostic • “Cutoff” levels, defined at 95% predictive values may be more predictive than SPTs of clinical reactivity in certain populations • Fluorescence-labeled antibody assays have comparable sensitivity to that of SPT • Different assays yield variable results • Absolute levels of sIgE may directly correlate with the likelihood of clinical reactivity when compared with OFC Allergen-specific serum IgE • Predictive values vary among studies • Patient selection (patients’ ages) • Clinical disorder studied • Length of food avoidance • Negative test in face of highly suggestive historyconsider medically supervised food challenge Predictive value of IgE testing in positive or negative OFC results 18 IMMUNOCAP PROBABILITY OF REACTING TO A FOOD AT A GIVEN IGE VALUE Sampson HA. JACI 113:805-19, 2004 TREATMENT: PATIENTS AND CARETAKERS • • • • Recognition of early signs and symptoms How and when to give epinephrine (written plan) Administration of liquid or chewable antihistamine Ambulance to emergency room TREATMENT: MEDICAL PERSONNEL • Assess rapidly and provide supportive care • Medications: – Oxygen – Epinephrine – IV Fluids - Antihistamines - Bronchodilators - Steroids EpiPen Injection Site • Pay attention to factors that might inhibit response to treatment • Observe for relapse • Provide prescription for auto-injectable epinephrine device • Arrange follow-up care 19 FATALITIES DUE TO ANAPHYLACTIC REACTIONS TO FOODS Bock SA, et al. JACI 2001;107:191-3 (update JACI 2007;119:1016-18) • Analyzed 32 cases reported to national registry • Identified food – Peanut: 20 cases – Tree nuts: 10 cases – Milk & fish: 1 case each • • • • • Both sexes equally affected (16 F/16M) Most were adolescents or young adults (r: 2-32 years) Previous knowledge of food allergy- all, but one Most reactions occurred outside of the home (27/32) Asthmatics at higher risk – 24 of 25 with complete data had asthma • Lack of availability of epinephrine at the time of the reaction (4/32 had epinephrine available) – 4 who received epinephrine in a timely fashion still died Patient factors + • Complicating medical issues – Asthmatic – On medication that might interfere with response to treatment - β-blocker • Food allergy – Peanut or tree nut sensitive • Level of sensitivity – Previous reaction patterns • Target organ • Life-threatening Event factors • Food involved – Peanuts, tree nuts • Route of exposure – Contact, inhalation, ingestion, injection • Dose • Target organ system – Pulmonary, cardiovascular, GI, cutaneous • Treatment • Response to treatment • Maturity/psychosocial issues Severity of reaction TREATMENT: FOLLOW-UP VISIT AFTER ALLERGIC REACTION • Monitor response to treatment • Review circumstances leading to the reaction • Review effectiveness of Food Allergy Action Plan • Make necessary alterations • Review importance of medic-alert bracelet or other form of identification as food allergic • Provide emotional support 20 Bird JA, et al, JACI Pract 2015;3:1-11. Web-based Resources for Food Allergies Bird JA, et al, JACI Pract 2015;3:1-11. Bird JA, et al, JACI Pract 2015;3:1-11. 21 LONG TERM MANAGEMENT • Follow-up visits at appropriate intervals • History • Determine frequency & specifics of reactions • Exposure to offending foods without a reaction? • Review current diet • Development of allergies to other foods? • Routinely carrying treatment medications? • Impact of food allergy on quality of life? • Development of other allergic disease (asthma)? LONG TERM MANAGEMENT • Physical examination • Appropriate weight gain • Findings suggestive of new allergic disease or other disease • Laboratory data • Skin testing? • ImmunoCAP? • Other testing suggested by history? LONG TERM MANAGEMENT • Management • Reinforce need to carry medications at all times and review use of medical devices (epinephrine auto-injector, inhaler if asthmatic) • Food challenge indicated by history and/or lab results? • Aid in interactions with school and community • Answer questions • Suggestions regarding impact on quality of life • Is referral indicated • Allergist • Gastroenterologist • Dietician • Psychosocial clinician 22 FOOD ALLERGY: INDICATIONS FOR REFERRAL TO THE ALLERGIST • Diagnostic assessment of the patient with: – Severe or persistent disease – Multiple food sensitivity – Complications – Coexisting allergic disease (asthma, atopic dermatitis) • • • • • Test interpretation Identification of offending foods Performance of food challenges Development of targeted elimination diets Comprehensive patient education QUESTIONS ?? ? ? Oatmeal Studios 23