Larson Katelin, McLaughlin Jessica, Stonehouse Mallory, Young Brittany, Haglund Kristin
Katelin Larson is a Pediatric Nurse Practitioner, Olympia Pediatrics, Olympia, WA. Jessica McLaughlin is a Pediatric Nurse Practitioner, School Health Clinics of Santa Clara County, San Jose, CA. Mallory Stonehouse is a Graduate Student, Marquette University College of Nursing, Milwaukee, WI. Brittany Young is a Graduate Student, Marquette University College of Nursing, Milwaukee, WI. Kristin Haglund is an Associate Professor, Pediatric Nurse Practitioner, Marquette University College of Nursing, Milwaukee, WI. She can be reached at
MCN Am J Matern Child Nurs. 2017 Mar/Apr;42(2):72-80. doi: 10.1097/NMC.0000000000000313.
The purpose of this systematic review was to explore the association between timing of introduction of potentially allergenic foods to infants and development of food allergies.
CINAHL, Medline, PubMed, Science Direct, and Web of Science were searched using the terms solid food, complementary food, or infant feeding combined with allergy or hypersensitivity for articles published in English in 2000 or later. Inclusion criteria were 1) primary research articles with 2) a focus on association between introduction of complementary foods including potentially allergenic foods into diets of infants less than 12 months of age and development of food allergies. Articles were excluded if they were 1) not primary research, 2) about complementary foods only (without specificity of allergenic foods), or 3) on allergic conditions other than food allergy (such as asthma or eczema).
The initial literature search yielded 533 articles; 14 articles met inclusion criteria. Level of evidence of each study was determined with the SORT criteria. Results found that delayed introduction of solid foods in general and allergenic foods in particular was not associated with decreased risk for allergic diseases among high and low-risk infants. Later introduction was associated with increased risk for allergy development.
For infants at low risk for development of food allergies, providers should advise caregivers to introduce potentially allergenic foods with other solid foods between 4 and 6 months of age when children show an interest in eating solids. Infants at high risk for peanut allergy, should be evaluated by an allergy specialist prior to introduction of peanuts and work with providers to create an individualized plan for introduction of peanuts and other allergenic foods as needed.
本系统评价旨在探讨婴儿引入潜在致敏性食物的时间与食物过敏发生之间的关联。
使用“固体食物”“辅食”或“婴儿喂养”与“过敏”或“超敏反应”相结合的检索词,对CINAHL、Medline、PubMed、Science Direct和Web of Science数据库进行检索,以查找2000年或之后发表的英文文章。纳入标准为:1)原始研究文章;2)重点关注将包括潜在致敏性食物在内的辅食引入12月龄以下婴儿饮食与食物过敏发生之间的关联。若文章为以下情况则被排除:1)非原始研究;2)仅关于辅食(无致敏性食物特异性);3)关于食物过敏以外的过敏状况(如哮喘或湿疹)。
初步文献检索得到533篇文章;14篇文章符合纳入标准。每项研究的证据水平根据SORT标准确定。结果发现,一般而言延迟引入固体食物,尤其是致敏性食物,与高风险和低风险婴儿患过敏性疾病的风险降低无关。较晚引入与过敏发生风险增加有关。
对于食物过敏发生风险低的婴儿,医疗服务提供者应建议看护者在婴儿4至6月龄且对进食固体食物表现出兴趣时,将潜在致敏性食物与其他固体食物一同引入。花生过敏高风险的婴儿,在引入花生前应由过敏专科医生进行评估,并与医疗服务提供者合作,根据需要制定个性化的花生及其他致敏性食物引入计划。