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Prevalence and risk factors for milk allergy overdiagnosis in the BEEP trial cohort

Allen, Hilary I.; Wing, Olivia; Milkova, Dara; Jackson, Emilia; Li, Karen; Bradshaw, Lucy E.; Wyatt, Laura; Haines, Rachel; Santer, Miriam; Murphy, Andrew W.; Brown, Sara J.; Kelleher, Maeve; Perkin, Michael R.; Jay, Nicola; Smith, Timothy D. H.; Moriarty, Frank; Montgomery, Alan A.; Williams, Hywel C.; Boyle, Robert J.

Prevalence and risk factors for milk allergy overdiagnosis in the BEEP trial cohort Thumbnail


Authors

Hilary I. Allen

Olivia Wing

Dara Milkova

Emilia Jackson

Karen Li

LAURA WYATT Laura.Wyatt@nottingham.ac.uk
Clinical Trial Manager

Rachel Haines

Miriam Santer

Andrew W. Murphy

Sara J. Brown

Maeve Kelleher

Michael R. Perkin

Nicola Jay

Timothy D. H. Smith

Frank Moriarty

ALAN MONTGOMERY ALAN.MONTGOMERY@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Director Nottingham Clinical Trials Unit

Profile image of HYWEL WILLIAMS

HYWEL WILLIAMS HYWEL.WILLIAMS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Dermato-Epidemiology

Robert J. Boyle



Abstract

Background: Cow's milk allergy (CMA) overdiagnosis in young children appears to be increasing and has not been well characterised. We used a clinical trial population to characterise CMA overdiagnosis and identify individual‐level and primary care practice‐level risk factors. Methods: We analysed data from 1394 children born in England in 2014–2016 (BEEP trial, ISRCTN21528841). Participants underwent formal CMA diagnosis at ≤2 years. CMA overdiagnosis was defined in three separate ways: parent‐reported milk reaction; primary care record of milk hypersensitivity symptoms; and primary care record of low‐allergy formula prescription. Results: CMA was formally diagnosed in 19 (1.4%) participants. CMA overdiagnosis was common: 16.1% had parent‐reported cow's milk hypersensitivity, 11.3% primary care recorded milk hypersensitivity and 8.7% had low‐allergy formula prescription. Symptoms attributed to cow's milk hypersensitivity in participants without CMA were commonly gastrointestinal and reported from a median age of 49 days. Low‐allergy formula prescriptions in participants without CMA lasted a median of 10 months (interquartile range 1, 16); the estimated volume consumed was a median of 272 litres (26, 448). Risk factors for CMA overdiagnosis were high practice‐based low‐allergy formula prescribing in the previous year and maternal report of antibiotic prescription during pregnancy. Exclusive formula feeding from birth was associated with increased low‐allergy formula prescription. There was no evidence that practice prescribing of paediatric adrenaline auto‐injectors or anti‐reflux medications, or maternal features such as anxiety, age, parity and socioeconomic status were associated with CMA overdiagnosis. Conclusion: CMA overdiagnosis is common in early infancy. Risk factors include high primary care practice‐based low‐allergy formula prescribing and maternal report of antibiotic prescription during pregnancy.

Citation

Allen, H. I., Wing, O., Milkova, D., Jackson, E., Li, K., Bradshaw, L. E., Wyatt, L., Haines, R., Santer, M., Murphy, A. W., Brown, S. J., Kelleher, M., Perkin, M. R., Jay, N., Smith, T. D. H., Moriarty, F., Montgomery, A. A., Williams, H. C., & Boyle, R. J. (online). Prevalence and risk factors for milk allergy overdiagnosis in the BEEP trial cohort. Allergy, https://doi.org/10.1111/all.16203

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 2, 2024
Online Publication Date Jun 20, 2024
Deposit Date Aug 28, 2024
Publicly Available Date Sep 3, 2024
Journal Allergy
Print ISSN 0105-4538
Electronic ISSN 1398-9995
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/all.16203
Keywords primary care, low‐allergy formula, overdiagnosis, cow's milk allergy
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/36558523
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/all.16203