Skip to content

Research Alters Allergy Approach

A new study reveals more about infants and peanut allergies

By Malia Jacobson May 17, 2016

A slice of bread with peanut butter on it.
A slice of bread with peanut butter on it.

This article originally appeared in the June 2016 issue of Seattle magazine.

The rate of developing peanut allergy in Western nations has doubled in the past decade, but Seattle-funded research holds clues to prevention.

A new study published in The New England Journal of Medicine, designed and funded in Seattle by Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason and the Immune Tolerance Network, indicates that feeding peanuts to infants at risk of developing an allergy to peanuts can help prevent allergy development, even after those infants stop eating peanuts. This study is an extension of last year’s landmark LEAP (Learning Early About Peanut Allergy) study, which showed that early consumption of peanuts by infants with existing food sensitivities reduced the rate of developing peanut allergy by 80 percent.

The follow-up study, called LEAP-ON, shows that infants don’t need to keep eating peanuts to be protected; results persisted even after a year without peanuts. The research is altering the way physicians approach this life-threatening allergy. Bring on the PB&J.

 

Follow Us

Dog of the Month: Josie
Sponsored

Dog of the Month: Josie

Adopt this wiggly two-year-old who loves hiking and bedtime snuggles.

Josie comes with big claims. She says she is the owner of a 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 that needs a little bit of work but should be “totally sweet” once she “hits the junkyard for a couple of parts.” When asked for further details on Josie’s ownership of the car, a baffled Washington Department of…

Mother’s Day Gift Guide

Mother’s Day Gift Guide

Shop local and give her something she’ll love.

Mother’s Day is coming up on Sunday, May 10, and the right gift really depends on the mom. Maybe she wants flowers. Maybe she wants lunch by the water. Maybe she wants something useful, pretty, or delicious. Whatever the day looks like, a little thought goes a long way. It can also be a complicated…

Here’s Your Earth Month To-Do List

Here’s Your Earth Month To-Do List

Local cleanups, trail work, and ways to get outside this April.

In the Pacific Northwest, a region deeply connected to water, forests, and ecosystems, the climate conversation has never been theoretical. It shows up as shrinking snowpack, severe flooding, and warming streams. If the planet’s future—and that of our own backyard—can feel overwhelming, this year’s Earth Day theme, “Our Power, Our Planet,” puts the action back…

A Clear Vision for Growth

A Clear Vision for Growth

Local optometry clinic Eye Eye celebrates a decade in business and prepares to debut its first line of frames.

In Leschi Park, overlooking Lake Washington, towers one of Seattle’s many historic trees, a giant sequoia planted sometime in the early 20th century. Just down the street on Lakeside Avenue is the second location of eye clinic and shop Eye Eye, where Dr. Will Pentecost seems to be borrowing some of the leafy specimen’s energy….