Efficacy and Safety of Sesame Oral Immunotherapy—A Real-World, Single-Center Study

Liat Nachshon*, Michael R. Goldberg, Michael B. Levy, Michael Y. Appel, Naama Epstein-Rigbi, Jonas Lidholm, Marie Holmqvist, Yitzhak Katz, Arnon Elizur

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

49 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: The presence of sesame in Western diet is increasing, making its avoidance by sesame-allergic patients more challenging. Objective: To report the efficacy and safety of sesame oral immunotherapy (OIT). Methods: Sixty patients aged 4 years or older, diagnosed as sesame-allergic on the basis of a positive oral food challenge, were consecutively enrolled into OIT between November 2014 and November 2017. Fifteen patients with sesame allergy, based on a positive oral food challenge or a recent immediate reaction, and a positive skin prick test result or specific IgE, continued sesame elimination and served as observational controls. Immunologic parameters were measured in a subset (OIT, n = 16; controls, n = 11) at the start and end of the study. Fully desensitized patients continued daily consumption of 1200 mg sesame protein and challenged with 4000 mg after more than 6 months. Results: Fifty-three OIT-treated patients (88.4%) were fully desensitized to sesame, compared with 0% of controls. Four additional patients (total 57 of 60 = 95%) were desensitized to more than 1000 mg protein. Reactions occurred in 4.7% of hospital doses and 1.9% of home doses. Epinephrine-treated reactions occurred in 16.7% of patients for hospital and 8.3% for home doses. Significant decreases in rSes i 1 IgE (P = .007) and basophil reactivity (P = .001) and increases in sesame and rSes i 1 IgG4 (P = .001) occurred in OIT-treated patients but not in controls. Forty-seven patients desensitized to 4000 mg were evaluated more than 6 months after reaching maintenance. Only mild reactions were reported during maintenance, and all passed the 4000-mg challenge. Conclusions: Sesame-OIT is an effective alternative to sesame avoidance in allergic patients. The potential for adverse events necessitates its performance in specialized centers.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2775-2781.e2
JournalJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice
Volume7
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2019

Funding

FundersFunder number
Leon Alcalay Chair
Tel Aviv University
Ministry of Health, State of Israel

    Keywords

    • Desensitization
    • OFC
    • OIT
    • Oral food challenge
    • Oral immunotherapy
    • Sesame allergy

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