Apple-birch pollen-food allergy syndrome is particularly common in Northern and Central Europe (70% of patients allergic to birch pollen), and classically induces an oral syndrome that impairs patients' quality of life. Current treatment is based on food avoidance. However, evidence of the efficacy of this treatment is limited (small numbers, lack of validation with a control group, absence of double-blind evaluation of the primary endpoint in a challenge test against placebo). The aim of oral immunotherapy with raw apple is to improve the management of allergic patients by enabling them to acquire tolerance to raw apple and other rosacea.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
110
Progressively increasing doses of peeled fresh Golden apple or placebo will be consumed by the patient (4g, 12g, 40g, 120g) with a time interval of 20 minutes between each dose.
Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg
Strasbourg, France, France
RECRUITINGEfficacy of oral immunotherapy to raw apple on the reduction of oral raw apple syndrome
To evaluate the efficacy of oral immunotherapy to raw apple on the reduction of oral raw apple syndrome after 9 months of oral immunotherapy. A reduction in oral syndrome after 9 months of oral immunotherapy with raw apple is defined as: absence of oral syndrome on the 9-month raw apple OPT when consuming a dose of raw apple 3 times greater than the dose of raw apple triggering oral syndrome on the initial raw apple oral challenge.
Time frame: 9 month
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