Development and acceptability of a decision-aid for food allergy oral immunotherapy in children

Aikaterini Anagnostou, Elissa M. Abrams, Melanie Carver, Edmond S. Chan, Sanaz Eftekhari, Justin Greiwe, Hannah Jaffee, Jay A. Lieberman, Douglas P. Mack, S. Shahzad Mustafa, Marcus S. Shaker, David Stukus, Julie Wang, Matthew Greenhawt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Limited decision-support tools are available to help shared decision-making (SDM) regarding food oral immunotherapy (OIT) initiation. No current tool covers all foods, forms, and pediatric ages for which OIT is offered. Methods: In compliance with International Patient Decision Aid Standards criteria, this pediatric decision-aid comparing OIT versus avoidance was developed in three stages. Nested qualitative data assessing OIT decisional needs were supplemented with evidence-synthesis from the OIT literature to create the prototype decision-aid content. This underwent iterative development with food allergy experts and patient advocacy stakeholders until unanimous consensus was reached regarding content, bias, readability, and utility in making a choice. Lastly, the tool underwent validated assessment of decisional acceptability, decisional conflict, and decisional self-efficacy. Results: The decision-aid underwent 5 iterations, resulting in a 4-page written aid (Flesch–Kincaid reading level 6.1) explaining therapy choices, risks and benefits, providing self-rating for attribute importance for the options and self-assessment regarding how adequate the information was in decision-making. A total of n = 135 caregivers of food-allergic children assessed the decision-aid, noting good acceptability, high decisional self-efficacy (mean score 85.9/100) and low decisional conflict (mean score 20.9/100). Information content was rated adequate and sufficient, the therapy choices wording balanced, and presented without bias for a “best choice.” Lower decisional conflict was associated with caregiver-reported anaphylaxis. Conclusions: This first pediatric OIT decision-aid, agnostic to product, allergen, and age has good acceptability, limited bias, and is associated with low decisional conflict and high decisional self-efficacy. It supports SDM in navigating the decision to start OIT or continue allergen avoidance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)205-214
Number of pages10
JournalAllergy: European Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Volume80
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • allergen avoidance
  • anaphylaxis
  • decision-aid
  • decisional acceptability
  • decisional conflict
  • decisional self-efficacy
  • food allergy
  • oral immunotherapy
  • shared decision-making

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