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Breakthrough could offer relief for peanut allergy sufferers

An Australian trial has pointed the way to a long-term solution for those with food allergies, with 70 per cent able to eat nuts without a reaction four years on

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The new study shows a lot of promise for peanut allergy sufferers. Photo: Alamy

Australian researchers have reported a major breakthrough in the relief of deadly peanut allergy with the discovery of a long-lasting treatment they say offers hope for a possible cure.

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In clinical trials conducted by scientists at Melbourne’s Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, children with peanut allergies were given a probiotic along with small doses of a peanut protein over an 18-month period.

When the experiment ended in 2013 some 80 per cent of the kids were able to tolerate peanuts.

The research, published in medical journal The Lancet, found that four years on, about 70 per cent could still eat peanuts without an adverse reaction.

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Mimi Tang was lead researcher in the peanut study.
Mimi Tang was lead researcher in the peanut study.
“The importance of this finding is that these children were able to eat peanuts like children who don’t have peanut allergy and still maintain their tolerant state, protected against reactions to peanut,” says lead researcher Mimi Tang.
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