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Oral Challenge Studies: Purpose, Design and Evaluation

Oral Challenge Studies: Purpose, Design and Evaluation. Stefano Luccioli, MD. Goals. Overview of oral challenge studies. Purpose Design and conduct Selection of subjects & materials Blinding and dosing protocol Statistics Evaluation and interpretation of data General issues

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Oral Challenge Studies: Purpose, Design and Evaluation

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  1. Oral Challenge Studies: Purpose, Design and Evaluation Stefano Luccioli, MD

  2. Goals Overview of oral challenge studies • Purpose • Design and conduct • Selection of subjects & materials • Blinding and dosing protocol • Statistics • Evaluation and interpretation of data • General issues • Sensitivity of subjects • Clinical response and severity

  3. Purpose of challenge studies • Confirm diagnosis of food allergy • Gold standard: Double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge (DBPCFC) • Evaluate tolerance (after elimination diet) • Evaluate allergenic foods/ingredients for certain subpopulations

  4. Purpose of challenge studies • Determine minimal eliciting doses • Information on individual sensitivity • Therapeutic comparisons • LOEL/NOEL data for establishing thresholds • Insufficient animal model and epidemiological (market experience, case reports) data • Evaluate reaction severity- uncommon • Current biomarkers not predictive

  5. Traditional Tox models Genetic Homogeneity One ingredient in food Defined endpoints for severity NOEL defined Reproducible Dose response Allergen food challenges Genetic Heterogeneity Multiple allergens in food Multiple endpoints; severity not well defined LOEL mainly; rare NOEL May not be reproducible Dose distribution Assessment of food ingredients

  6. Design and Conduct of Oral Challenge Studies

  7. Subjects • Subpopulations: Adults vs children vs infants • Men and women, multiethnic • Particular concerns/issues: • Diagnosis for equivocal IgE or clinical history • Evidence of tolerance • Coexistant allergies (i.e. milk/soy) • Specific ingredients (i.e. hypoallergenic infant formulas) • Exclusion of individuals: • Previous H/O anaphylaxis or unstable asthma • Elevated food-specific IgE levels

  8. Test materials • Type of food material • Various preparations per food • Ex: Peanut flour vs ground peanut vs peanut butter • Increased shelf-life for ease of administration • Dose units (mg food vs mg protein vs mg/kg) • Fresh vs processed • Raw vs cooked • Liquid vs solid food

  9. Blinding • Foods – mask taste, smell, and texture • Vehicles (i.e. Milk shakes, apple sauce, Vivonex®, tapioca) • Capsules • Delayed absorption; bypass oral cavity • Protocol – mask consumer and/or researcher • Open • Singled-blinded (SB) • Double-blinded (DB) • Placebos - for subjective responses

  10. NOEL LOEL 2X 4X 8X 16X 64X 108X 32X Subj. symptom Obj. symptom Negative Open Challenge Study protocol 4X X • Starting dose (X) varies (usually mg doses) • Time interval varies • Dose escalation of divided doses (usually 6 to 10) w/ placebos • Two to 10-fold dose increments • Stop after objective symptom; some also record subjective symptoms • Report eliciting discrete and/or cumulative dose 15-60min 7X 1-2 hrs

  11. Other issues • Clinic/office –experimental setting • Medications • Fasting • Clinical history of reactivity • i.e. exercise

  12. Statistical endpoints • Sampled population • Percentage that will react to challenge (i.e. food allergy diagnosis) • Percentage to have a mild vs severe initial reaction • General allergic population • Percentage that will or will not react to specific food concentration (s) during challenge • Confidence levels for incidence of allergic reactions

  13. Sample size and confidence levels Incidence Confidence level 95% 99% 99.9% 1/10 = .1 *29 44 66 1/20 = .05 59 90 135 1/50 = .02 149 228 342 1/100 = .01 299 459 688 1/200 = .005 598 919 1380 1/500 = .002 1497 2301 3451 1/1000 = .001 2995 4604 6905 1/2000 = .0005 5992 9210 13814 1/5000 = .0002 14978 23030 34540 1/10000 = .0001 29957 46060 69080 } Number of individuals to be tested *Basis for hypoallergenicity determination for infant formulas

  14. Evaluation/Interpretation of Challenge Study Data

  15. General interpretation • Study is as good/predictive as the method or protocol used • Grouping of data for population statistics • Most studies not standardized* • Dose, blinding/testing materials, or interpretation of clinical symptoms • All sensitive populations tested? • Statistical power for confidence levels • Should this include data from individuals nonreactive to oral challenge? What about foreign challenge study data? *Standardized protocols have been published; however, the bulk of currently available data is from non-standardized studies

  16. General interpretation • Not a true dose-response study • Challenge stops after initial positive response • Severity endpoints not well defined • Experimental exposure – non real-life • False positives/ negatives • Difficult to predict reactions to future exposures

  17. Subject sensitivity • Genetic heterogeneity of individuals • Sensitization to different allergens within food • High variability in dose (million-fold) from least sensitive to most sensitive • Potential link with severity • Some studies suggest that the individuals most sensitive to low doses also appear to have the most severe reactions • Sensitivity/severity may vary with food type • Individual sensitivities may vary over time • Influenced by H/O asthma • Eating behaviors and other factors (exercise, alcohol, medications)

  18. Severe 2 4 Moderate 1 3 Mild Dose of Allergenic protein Hypothetical Dose Response Curve**Model adapted from J. Hourihane 1- “Normal” 2- ?Unstable asthma, alcohol, exercise 3- ?Food matrix, antihistamines 4- ?Unidentified factors

  19. Evaluation of Clinical Responses • Interpretation of eliciting dose • Subjective vs objective symptoms • Reaction severity and characteristics of elicited symptoms

  20. Allergic Response Endpoints

  21. Subjective vs objective symptoms • Objective symptoms • Measurable indicator of allergic response • Many different endpoints possible, including anaphylaxis • Interpretation may vary among investigators • Subjective symptoms • May result from nonallergic causes; often not recorded • Often occur prior to objective signs • Early adverse events/ LOELs? • Need to review challenge and placebo data

  22. Other eliciting dose considerations • Starting dose • If response at this dose, cannot derive NOEL • Common finding with many diagnostic challenges • Dose increments • Time interval between doses • Some adverse reactions may be delayed > 60 min (i.e. eczema) • Discrete vs cumulative dose • How does this mimic true exposure?

  23. Food /Protein ALLERGY • Unique toxicological response Sensitization B cell T cell IgE Antibody Elicitation • Release of mediators, cytokines (Amplification mechanism) • Rapidly progresses in severity Mast cell/ Basophil

  24. Severity of allergic response is on a continuum SubjectiveObjectiveAnaphylaxisDeath • Early observed objective symptom may rapidly progress to something worse • Symptoms may not be reproducible on subsequent rechallenge

  25. Reaction Severity • Anaphylaxis is not a clearly defined term • Most studies only report actual symptom • Few document or report severity of challenge response • Mild vs moderate vs severe • Should severe responses be interpreted differently? • Potentiating/ mitigating factors for severity • Anxiety/stress; medications; asthma

  26. Conclusions • Oral food challenges provide best available data to determine: • Clinical sensitivity to minimal eliciting doses • Reaction severity to initial dose • Groups of sensitive subpopulations • Challenge data currently available for interpretation is not standardized among studies • Data on sensitive populations may still be lacking • No proven value as a tool for predicting reaction severity to future exposures

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