A recent study published in Pediatrics examined strategies to help paediatric clinicians better adhere to national guidelines recommending the early introduction of peanut-containing foods in infancy to prevent peanut allergy. The Intervention to Reduce Early Peanut Allergy in Children (iReach) Trial evaluated strategies designed to improve clinicians’ adherence to these recommendations.
Peanut allergy
Peanut allergy is one of the most common food allergies in children. However, early introduction of peanuts has been shown to reduce the risk of developing this allergy. Current advice from the UK health departments recommends introducing foods known to cause allergies from around 6 months of age, but not before 4 months. Research shows that excluding allergens like peanut from a baby’s diet may actually increase their risk of developing an allergy.
Why early introduction matters
Early exposure to potential allergens such as peanuts helps the developing immune system recognise them as harmless. Without this early contact through the gut, the immune system may incorrectly treat the allergen as a threat, leading to allergic reactions.
Practice challenges
Despite clear recommendations, surveys in the United States have shown that many paediatricians were not routinely advising early peanut introduction. Barriers included limited time during visits, uncertainty about safety, and lack of familiarity with the latest guidance.
How the research was conducted
The trial included 30 paediatric practices in the Chicago and Peoria, Illinois, regions. These included health centres, private clinics, and academic practices. Researchers developed a set of simple, practical tools to support paediatricians in implementing early peanut introduction guidelines. Practices in the intervention group received:
Control clinics continued usual care without these tools.
Findings
In clinics using these tools, about 4 in 5 low-risk infants (those without eczema or egg allergy) received a recommendation for early peanut introduction, compared with roughly 1 in 3 in clinics without them.
Infants seen in practices using the intervention were nearly 15 times more likely to receive care consistent with national guidelines.
Researchers will continue to track outcomes until the children reach 2.5 years old to see whether the intervention reduces peanut allergy prevalence.
Key takeaways
Future research
This study shows that practical tools can help improve child health by supporting safe early introduction of peanuts. Widespread use of these tools could lower the number of children developing peanut allergies. Researchers plan to keep improving these resources and expand access to more families.
For the full study visit: Pediatric Clinician Adherence to Peanut Allergy Prevention Guidelines: A Randomized Trial | Pediatrics | American Academy of Pediatrics