Peanut avoidance may backfire: study tests allergy persistence at age 5
NCT ID NCT02497261
First seen May 15, 2026 · Last updated May 22, 2026 · Updated 2 times
Summary
This study looks at 200 children who have positive peanut allergy tests but avoid eating peanuts. Researchers will use a double-blind food challenge to see if these children are truly allergic or have outgrown it. The goal is to understand whether avoiding peanuts in early life makes a peanut allergy more likely to persist by age 5. This is an observational study, not a treatment.
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Summaries may miss details or leave out important information. Before applying or accepting participation, make sure you have read and understood the full study. Curemydisease.com takes no responsibility whatsoever for anything missed, misunderstood, or acted upon as a result of our summary — we know it does not capture everything.
This is a summary of the original study . Summaries may miss details or leave out important information. Before applying or accepting participation, make sure you have read and understood the full study. Curemydisease.com takes no responsibility whatsoever for anything missed, misunderstood, or acted upon as a result of our summary — we know it does not capture everything.
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