Sabita Islam
University of Cambridge
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The Lancet | 2014
Katherine Anagnostou; Sabita Islam; Y. King; Loraine Foley; Laura Pasea; Simon Bond; Christopher R. Palmer; John Deighton; P. W. Ewan; Andrew Clark
Summary Background Small studies suggest peanut oral immunotherapy (OIT) might be effective in the treatment of peanut allergy. We aimed to establish the efficacy of OIT for the desensitisation of children with allergy to peanuts. Methods We did a randomised controlled crossover trial to compare the efficacy of active OIT (using characterised peanut flour; protein doses of 2–800 mg/day) with control (peanut avoidance, the present standard of care) at the NIHR/Wellcome Trust Cambridge Clinical Research Facility (Cambridge, UK). Randomisation (1:1) was by use of an audited online system; group allocation was not masked. Eligible participants were aged 7–16 years with an immediate hypersensitivity reaction after peanut ingestion, positive skin prick test to peanuts, and positive by double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge (DBPCFC). We excluded participants if they had a major chronic illness, if the care provider or a present household member had suspected or diagnosed allergy to peanuts, or if there was an unwillingness or inability to comply with study procedures. Our primary outcome was desensitisation, defined as negative peanut challenge (1400 mg protein in DBPCFC) at 6 months (first phase). Control participants underwent OIT during the second phase, with subsequent DBPCFC. Immunological parameters and disease-specific quality-of-life scores were measured. Analysis was by intention to treat. Fishers exact test was used to compare the proportion of those with desensitisation to peanut after 6 months between the active and control group at the end of the first phase. This trial is registered with Current Controlled Trials, number ISRCTN62416244. Findings The primary outcome, desensitisation, was recorded for 62% (24 of 39 participants; 95% CI 45–78) in the active group and none of the control group after the first phase (0 of 46; 95% CI 0–9; p<0·001). 84% (95% CI 70–93) of the active group tolerated daily ingestion of 800 mg protein (equivalent to roughly five peanuts). Median increase in peanut threshold after OIT was 1345 mg (range 45–1400; p<0·001) or 25·5 times (range 1·82–280; p<0·001). After the second phase, 54% (95% CI 35–72) tolerated 1400 mg challenge (equivalent to roughly ten peanuts) and 91% (79–98) tolerated daily ingestion of 800 mg protein. Quality-of-life scores improved (decreased) after OIT (median change −1·61; p<0·001). Side-effects were mild in most participants. Gastrointestinal symptoms were, collectively, most common (31 participants with nausea, 31 with vomiting, and one with diarrhoea), then oral pruritus after 6·3% of doses (76 participants) and wheeze after 0·41% of doses (21 participants). Intramuscular adrenaline was used after 0·01% of doses (one participant). Interpretation OIT successfully induced desensitisation in most children within the study population with peanut allergy of any severity, with a clinically meaningful increase in peanut threshold. Quality of life improved after intervention and there was a good safety profile. Immunological changes corresponded with clinical desensitisation. Further studies in wider populations are recommended; peanut OIT should not be done in non-specialist settings, but it is effective and well tolerated in the studied age group. Funding MRC-NIHR partnership.
Allergy | 2009
Andrew Clark; Sabita Islam; Y. King; John Deighton; Katherine Anagnostou; P. W. Ewan
Background: Peanut allergy is common, potentially severe and rarely resolves causing impaired quality of life. No disease‐modifying treatment exists and there is therefore a need to develop a therapeutic intervention.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2011
Katherine Anagnostou; Andrew Clark; Y. King; Sabita Islam; John Deighton; P. W. Ewan
Background Peanut allergy is severe and rarely resolves.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2015
Alexandra F. Santos; Louisa K. James; Henry T. Bahnson; M.H. Shamji; Natália Couto-Francisco; Sabita Islam; Sally Houghton; Andrew Clark; Alick Stephens; Victor Turcanu; Stephen R. Durham; Hannah J. Gould; Gideon Lack
Background Most children with detectable peanut-specific IgE (P-sIgE) are not allergic to peanut. We addressed 2 non–mutually exclusive hypotheses for the discrepancy between allergy and sensitization: (1) differences in P-sIgE levels between children with peanut allergy (PA) and peanut-sensitized but tolerant (PS) children and (2) the presence of an IgE inhibitor, such as peanut-specific IgG4 (P-sIgG4), in PS patients. Methods Two hundred twenty-eight children (108 patients with PA, 77 PS patients, and 43 nonsensitized nonallergic subjects) were studied. Levels of specific IgE and IgG4 to peanut and its components were determined. IgE-stripped basophils or a mast cell line were used in passive sensitization activation and inhibition assays. Plasma of PS subjects and patients submitted to peanut oral immunotherapy (POIT) were depleted of IgG4 and retested in inhibition assays. Results Basophils and mast cells sensitized with plasma from patients with PA but not PS patients showed dose-dependent activation in response to peanut. Levels of sIgE to peanut and its components could only partially explain differences in clinical reactivity between patients with PA and PS patients. P-sIgG4 levels (P = .023) and P-sIgG4/P-sIgE (P < .001), Ara h 1–sIgG4/Ara h 1–sIgE (P = .050), Ara h 2–sIgG4/Ara h 2–sIgE (P = .004), and Ara h 3–sIgG4/Ara h 3–sIgE (P = .016) ratios were greater in PS children compared with those in children with PA. Peanut-induced activation was inhibited in the presence of plasma from PS children with detectable P-sIgG4 levels and POIT but not from nonsensitized nonallergic children. Depletion of IgG4 from plasma of children with PS (and POIT) sensitized to Ara h 1 to Ara h 3 partially restored peanut-induced mast cell activation (P = .007). Conclusions Differences in sIgE levels and allergen specificity could not justify the clinical phenotype in all children with PA and PS children. Blocking IgG4 antibodies provide an additional explanation for the absence of clinical reactivity in PS patients sensitized to major peanut allergens.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2011
Andrew Clark; Sabita Islam; Y. King; John Deighton; S. Szun; Katherine Anagnostou; P. W. Ewan
Background Egg allergy is common and although resolution to uncooked egg has been demonstrated, there is lack of evidence to guide reintroduction of well‐cooked egg.
Allergy | 2012
Andrew Clark; J. S. Mangat; Y. King; Sabita Islam; Katherine Anagnostou; Loraine Foley; John Deighton; P. W. Ewan
Double‐blinded challenges are widely used for diagnosing food allergy but are time‐consuming and cause severe reactions. Outcome relies on subjective interpretation of symptoms, which leads to variations in outcome between observers. Facial thermography combined with nasal peanut challenge was evaluated as a novel objective indicator of clinical allergy.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice | 2018
Shelley Dua; James Dowey; Loraine Foley; Sabita Islam; Y. King; P. W. Ewan; Andrew Clark
Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation | 2014
Katherine Anagnostou; Sabita Islam; Y. King; Loraine Foley; Laura Pasea; Christopher R. Palmer; Simon Bond; Pamela Ewan; Andrew Clark
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017
Shelley Dua; Loraine Foley; Y. King; Sabita Islam; P. W. Ewan; Andrew Clark
/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674915001025/ | 2015
Alexandra F Santos; Louisa K. James; Henry T. Bahnson; M.H. Shamji; Natália Couto-Francisco; Sabita Islam; Sally Houghton; Andrew Clark; Alick Stephens; Victor Turcanu; Stephen R. Durham; Hannah J. Gould; Gideon Lack