作者
Antonella Muraro,Debra de Silva,Susanne Halken,Margitta Worm,Ekaterina Khaleva,Stefania Arasi,Audrey DunnGalvin,Bright I. Nwaru,Nicolette W. de Jong,Pablo Rodríguez del Río,Paul Turner,Peter Smith,Philippe Bégin,Elizabeth Angier,Syed Hasan Arshad,Barbara Ballmer‐Weber,Kirsten Beyer,Carsten Bindslev‐Jensen,Antonella Cianferoni,Céline Demoulin,A. Deschildre,Motohiro Ebisawa,Montserrat Fernández‐Rivas,Alessandro Fiocchi,Bertine M.J. Flokstra-de Blok,Jennifer Gerdts,Josefine Gradman,Kate Grimshaw,Carla Jones,Susanne Lau,Richard Loh,Montserrat Álvaro‐Lozano,Mika J. Mäkelä,Mary Jane Marchisotto,Rosan Meyer,E. N. Clare Mills,Caroline Nilsson,Anna Nowak‐Węgrzyn,Ulugbek Nurmatov,Giovanni Battista Pajno,Márcia Helena Miranda Cardoso Podestá,Lars K. Poulsen,Hugh A. Sampson,Ángel Sánchez,Sabine Schnadt,Hania Szajewska,Ronald van Ree,Carina Venter,Berber Vlieg‐Boerstra,Amena Warner,Gary Wong,R.J.K. Wood,Torsten Zuberbier,Graham Roberts,Priya Bansal,Roberto Berni Canani,Katharina Blümchen,Andreas Bonertz,M. Bourgoin‐Heck,Ozlem Ceylon,Amandine Divaret‐Chauveau,David M. Fleischer,Maximiliano Gómez,Marion Groetch,Domingo Barber,Betina Hjorth,Lydia Collins Hussey,André C. Knulst,Agnes Sze Yin Leung,Douglas P. Mack,Vera Mahler,Francesca Mori,Leyla S. Namazova-Baranova,Kati Palosuo,Claudio Alberto Salvador Parisi,Antônio Carlos Pastorino,Odilija Rudzevičienė,Maria Said,Piotr Sawiec,Scott H. Sicherer,Sakura Sato,Світлана Зубченко
摘要
Food allergy affects approximately 2–4% of children and adults. This guideline provides recommendations for managing food allergy from the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network (GA2LEN). A multidisciplinary international Task Force developed the guideline using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE) II framework and the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) approach. We reviewed the latest available evidence as of April 2021 (161 studies) and created recommendations by balancing benefits, harms, feasibility, and patient and clinician experiences. We suggest that people diagnosed with food allergy avoid triggering allergens (low certainty evidence). We suggest that infants with cow's milk allergy who need a breastmilk alternative use either hypoallergenic extensively hydrolyzed cow's milk formula or an amino acid-based formula (moderate certainty). For selected children with peanut allergy, we recommend oral immunotherapy (high certainty), though epicutaneous immunotherapy might be considered depending on individual preferences and availability (moderate certainty). We suggest considering oral immunotherapy for children with persistent severe hen's egg or cow's milk allergy (moderate certainty). There are significant gaps in evidence about safety and effectiveness of the various strategies. Research is needed to determine the best approaches to education, how to predict the risk of severe reactions, whether immunotherapy is cost-effective and whether biological therapies are effective alone or combined with allergen immunotherapy.