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Letters

Is “nut-free” sunflower seed butter safe for children with peanut allergy?

Mimi Tang and Raymond J Mullins
MJA 2008; 188 (5): 316

To the Editor: In their report of a child with peanut allergy who developed sunflower seed allergy, Hsu and Katelaris caution against marketing claims of “safe alternatives” in allergic children.1 Their report also raises practical issues for those advising the parents of a child with food allergy: what is the risk of a new allergy developing; should a child with peanut or tree nut allergy avoid similar foods as well; and will food avoidance prevent new allergy from developing?

The natural history of peanut and tree nut allergy is for polysensitisation to develop over time. One study demonstrated that, in children younger than 2 years with peanut or tree nut allergy, 19% were sensitised and 2% were clinically reactive to more than one nut.2 By the age of 14 years, the percentages had risen to 72% and 47%, respectively. This has led to people with peanut or tree nut allergy being advised to avoid all nuts and seeds.2 Strategies commonly advised to reduce the risk of allergy developing are to avoid food allergens and to delay the introduction of allergenic foods until the age of 2 years, but evidence to support their effectiveness is limited,3 particularly for preventing food allergy.4

While studies in infants at high risk of allergic disease have reported an increased risk of eczema with early introduction of solids (before the age of 3–4 months),3 and a protective effect against asthma and eczema with the avoidance of environmental and food allergens in the first 6 months of life,4 a recent systematic review found “no strong evidence to support the association between early solid feeding and the development of persistent asthma, persistent food allergy, allergic rhinitis, or animal dander”.5 Furthermore, there is currently no evidence that avoidance strategies applied beyond 6 months of age are effective for allergy prevention, and provisional evidence that such strategies might actually promote sensitisation and food allergy rather than tolerance.6

So how should we advise patients?

The peanut and tree nut avoidance strategies advised will be largely dictated by:

Regarding the risk of developing new food allergy, we should advise patients that:

Mimi Tang, Associate Professor and Director1Raymond J Mullins, Physician2

1 Department of Allergy and Immunology, Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, VIC.

2 John James Medical Centre, Canberra, ACT.

rmullinsATallergycapital.com.au

  1. Hsu DC, Katelaris CH. Is “nut-free” sunflower seed butter safe for children with peanut allergy [letter]? Med J Aust 2007; 187: 542-543. <PubMed>
  2. Clark AT, Ewan PW. The development and progression of allergy to multiple nuts at different ages. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2005; 16: 507-511. <PubMed>
  3. Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy (ASCIA). Allergy prevention in children. http://www.allergy.org.au/content/view/182/1 (accessed Dec 2007).
  4. Arshad SH, Bateman B, Sadeghnejad A, et al. Prevention of allergic disease during childhood by allergen avoidance: the Isle of Wight prevention study. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2007; 119: 307-313. <PubMed>
  5. Tarini BA, Carroll AE, Sox CM, Christakis DA. Systematic review of the relationship between early introduction of solid foods to infants and the development of allergic disease. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2006; 160: 502-507. <PubMed>
  6. Poole JA, Barriga K, Leung DY, et al. Timing of initial exposure to cereal grains and the risk of wheat allergy. Pediatrics 2006; 117: 2175-2182. <PubMed>

(Received 28 Nov 2007, accepted 11 Dec 2007)


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