Overview
The objective of the study is to study whether the introduction of heated food products (more specifically heated hen's egg and/or cow's milk) in children with EoE would be possible without re-occurrence of the eosinophilic inflammation, while the intake of less heated products might cause disease recidive. Moreover, we would like to study whether the gradual re-introduction of less heated products after the most heated form is tolerated, could lead to tolerance induction in EoE.
Description
If inclusion criteria are met, after obtaining informed consent from the parents (and when old enough, assent from the children) children with cow's milk and/or hen's egg induced pedEoE will be included in this pilot trial. Baseline blood will be obtained before in-house OFC procedure and serum will be stored for specific IgG4 analysis. In parallel, PBMCs will be isolated and stimulated in vitro with heat denatured proteins. B cells will be stained by 4-laserflow cytometry. IgG4 production in supernatants will be studied by ELISA (specific IgG4 by Immunocap 100). This procedure will be repeated during each gastroscopy.
Children will be provoked in-house, based on the written procedure available for heated egg or cow's milk provocation. Afterwards, they will introduce heated egg by cake or 20' boiled cow's milk at least three times a week for 8 weeks and will return to the hospital for a gastroscopy with biopsies. EoE remission will be studied on biopsies of the upper and lower esophagus by eosinophil staining within the routine anatomopathological laboratory within our hospital.
If remission remains, subjects will be invited to introduce less heated hen's egg or cow's milk for 8 weeks, after which they will return to the hospital for the second gastroscopy with similar procedure. This is repeated three times until 4' soft-boiled egg or 5' boiled cow's milk is introduced for 8 weeks. When remission remains after this introduction, the children and parents are offered the possibility to terminate the study or to introduce either raw egg (tiramisu or chocolate mousse) or uncooked UHT-treated cow's milk for 8 weeks after which gastroscopy with biopsies will be performed.
If remission is lost, they will return to the strict avoidance diet for at least 10 weeks after which they will return to the hospital for their second gastroscopy. Upon remission after avoidance, the children will remain eligible for another heat denatured food challenge (when on diet for both).
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
All children (aged 12 months and older) presenting (since 1-1-2014: moment of diagnostic
guideline standardization for pedEoE) with diagnosed pedEoE at UZ Leuven eliminating either
hen's egg or cow's milk or both and in complete remission after their latest biopsy (no
longer than 12 months earlier, but preferentially as short as possible after their latest
biopsy) are eligible for the study. If the last biopsy has been performed more than 12
months earlier, a new gastro-duodenoscopy will be performed to verify remission and rule
out e.g. active gastritis. If they are on PPI and/or local budesonide treatment, this
should be stable for at least 3 months and will remain untouched during the entire study.
We will include 18 pedEoE subjects suffering from cow's milk induced EoE and 18 suffering
from hen's egg induced EoE.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Children younger than 12 months
- Children with active pedEoE
- Children who refuse to adhere to the protocol
- Children with associated IgE mediated hen's egg and/or cow's milk allergy with
specific IgE antibody titers that predict active (baked egg and/or baked milk) food
allergy with cut-off titers as used at the consultation of allergy (KLL). Those
children will become eligible however if their titers decrease while the study is
still open.