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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

8 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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