Xolair Treatment for Milk Allergic Children

Not Recruiting

Trial ID: NCT00968110

Purpose

This is a pilot feasibility study, using Xolair pretreatment for oral milk desensitization. The major assessment will be safety, and the investigators will evaluate for any type of reaction, including allergic reactions that occur during the course of the study.

Official Title

Xolair (Omalizumab) Enhances Oral Tolerance Induction in Milk Allergic Children

Eligibility


Inclusion Criteria:

   - Moderate to severe pediatric cow's milk allergy-sensitive subjects between the ages of
   4-18 years old.

   - Total IgE >30 kU/L

   - Sensitivity to cow's milk allergen will be documented by a positive skin prick test
   result (see Appendix E for details) and RAST test to cow's milk, with 25 kU/L as a
   lower limit of eligibility. Patients who do not meet the cow's milk RAST requirement
   may be eligible for this study if they have a history of a moderate to severe
   reaction, and if they have recently failed an oral food challenge with milk ordered by
   their physician.

   - All female subjects of child-bearing potential will be required to provide a urine
   sample for pregnancy testing that must be negative one week before being allowed to
   participate in the study.

   - Subjects must be planning to remain in the study area during the trial.

   - Subjects and/or their parents must be trained on the proper use of the Epi-Pen to be
   allowed to enroll in the study.

Exclusion Criteria:

   - No absolute contraindications to allergen skin testing and/or oral ingestion of milk
   are known. However, the risk of serious systemic anaphylactic reactions to milk
   suggests a number of preexisting conditions that should be considered relative
   contraindications. Among those conditions are acute infections, autoimmune disease,
   severe cardiac disease, and treatment with beta-adrenergic antagonistic drugs
   (beta-blockers).

   - Subjects having a history of severe anaphylaxis to milk requiring intubation or
   admission to an ICU, frequent allergic or non-allergic urticaria, or history
   consistent with poorly controlled persistent asthma.

   - Total IgE > 2000 IU/mL.

   - Subjects with unstable angina, significant arrhythmia, uncontrolled hypertension,
   chronic sinusitis, or other chronic or immunological diseases that in the mind of the
   investigator might interfere with the evaluation or administration of the test drug or
   pose additional risk to the subject e.g. gastrointestinal or gastroesophageal disease,
   chronic infections, scleroderma, hepatic and gallbladder disease, chronic non-allergic
   pulmonary disease.

   - Subject with an FEV1 or PEF less than 80% predicted (moderate persistent asthma) with
   or without controller medication (if able to perform the maneuver) at screening, the
   oral desensitization visit, or food challenge visit.

   - Subjects who have received an experimental drug in the last 30 days prior to admission
   into this study or who plan to use an experimental drug during the study.

   - Subjects who are current users of oral, intramuscular, or intravenous corticosteroids,
   tricyclic antidepressants, or are taking a beta-blocker (oral or topical).

   - Subjects routinely using medication that could induce adverse gastrointestinal
   reactions during the study.

   - Subjects refusing to sign the EpiPen Training Form (see Appendix F).

   - Pregnant or breast feeding females.

   - Subjects with a history of rice and soy allergy.

Intervention(s):

drug: omalizumab

Not Recruiting

Contact Information

Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford, CA 94305
Lisa Hoyte
6504984039