1 Quality of life in severe food allergy Audrey DunnGalvin PhD Reg.Psychol.Ps.S.I. 2 Living with severe food allergy An intricate pattern of ‘facts’ and ‘feelings’ interwoven into a child’s developmental pathway from birth to adulthood, and beyond. 3 The Facts 4 • Prevalence • Hospital admission for anaphylaxis • Case fatality rate of up to 1%, for medically coded food anaphylaxis, but varies according to the definition used. • Reliable identification of patients at increased risk of fatal food anaphylaxis is not currently possible. • Severity - majority symptom scores have been empirically created whereas data-driven instruments are scarce. Turner P.J., Campbell D.E. Epidemiology of severe anaphylaxis: can we use populationbased data to understand anaphylaxis? Curr Opin Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016;16:441–450 5 ‘Given the rarity of fatal food anaphylaxis, our inability to reliably stratify risk, and the limited evidence that specific interventions reduce fatality risk—quality of life considerations should play a key role in driving treatment decisions for people with food allergy’. Turner PJ, Jerschow E, Umasunthar T, Lin R, Campbell DE, Boyle RJ. Fatal Anaphylaxis: Mortality Rate and Risk Factors. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2017;5(5):1169-1178. doi:10.1016/j.jaip.2017.06.031 6 The Feelings 7 In food allergy – the risk is ever present but the ‘when’, ‘what’, ‘why’, ‘how much’, leads to uncertainty, fear, and anxiety. Uncertainty Difference Psychological Impact of Living with Severe Food Allergy Stress Guilt Anxiety Patient & Caregiver Sadness Anger Vigilance Fear Frustration Confidence Polloni L, DunnGalvin A. Muraro A. Allergy 2017; 72:1054–1060.; Dunn Galvin, A. & Hourihane, J. Clinic Rev Allerg Immunol 2018. 55: 217.; Flokstra-de Blok BMJ et al. Allergy. 2010;65:238–44; Polloni L, et al. J Health Psychol. 2015 Uncertainty Difference Psychological Impact of Living with Severe Food Allergy Stress Guilt Anxiety Patient & Caregiver Sadness I remember his first reaction very clearly..he was just six months …I thought I was going to lose him..you never get over that Anger feeling, ever….’ Parent, Ireland Vigilance Fear Frustration Confidence Polloni L, DunnGalvin A. Muraro A. Allergy 2017; 72:1054–1060.; Dunn Galvin, A. & Hourihane, J. Clinic Rev Allerg Immunol 2018. 55: 217.; Flokstra-de Blok BMJ et al. Allergy. 2010;65:238–44; Polloni L, et al. J Health Psychol. 2015 ‘I need to kind of live my life on the risk that something is going to happen or something might never happen Adolescent, UK Psychological Impact of Living with Severe Food Allergy Uncertainty Difference Stress Guilt Anxiety Patient & Caregiver Sadness I remember his first reaction very clearly..he was just six months …I thought I was going to lose him..you never get over that Anger feeling, ever….’ Parent, Ireland Vigilance Fear Frustration Confidence Polloni L, DunnGalvin A. Muraro A. Allergy 2017; 72:1054–1060.; Dunn Galvin, A. & Hourihane, J. Clinic Rev Allerg Immunol 2018. 55: 217.; Flokstra-de Blok BMJ et al. Allergy. 2010;65:238–44; Polloni L, et al. J Health Psychol. 2015 Travel Bullying Social, Behavioural & Environmental Impact of Living with Severe Food Allergy Planning School Eating out Patient & Caregiver Work Transition Autoinjector Awareness Exclusion Regulation Polloni L, DunnGalvin A. Muraro A. Allergy 2017; 72:1054–1060.; Dunn Galvin, A. & Hourihane, J. Clinic Rev Allerg Immunol 2018. 55: 217.; Flokstra-de Blok BMJ et al. Allergy. 2010;65:238–44; Polloni L, et al. J Health Psychol. 2015 ‘ ’you get tired of always having to be so aware, planning ahead …explaining to people, Bullying and then you get a reaction anyway because the chef doesn’t know about cross & contamination’ Adolescent, UK Social, Behavioural Environmental Impact of Living with Severe Food Allergy Travel Planning School Eating out Patient & Caregiver Work Transition Autoinjector Awareness Exclusion Regulation Polloni L, DunnGalvin A. Muraro A. Allergy 2017; 72:1054–1060.; Dunn Galvin, A. & Hourihane, J. Clinic Rev Allerg Immunol 2018. 55: 217.; Flokstra-de Blok BMJ et al. Allergy. 2010;65:238–44; Polloni L, et al. J Health Psychol. 2015 ‘ ’you get tired of always having to be so aware, planning ahead …explaining to people, Bullying and then you get a reaction anyway because the chef doesn’t know about cross & contamination’ Adolescent, UK Social, Behavioural Environmental Impact of Living with Severe Food Allergy Travel Planning School Eating out ‘ ‘I worry about when I should use [EAI], if I will be able to do it ok..and even if it Transition will work’ Adolescent, US Patient & Caregiver Work Autoinjector Awareness Exclusion Regulation Polloni L, DunnGalvin A. Muraro A. Allergy 2017; 72:1054–1060.; Dunn Galvin, A. & Hourihane, J. Clinic Rev Allerg Immunol 2018. 55: 217.; Flokstra-de Blok BMJ et al. Allergy. 2010;65:238–44; Polloni L, et al. J Health Psychol. 2015 Measuring the Impact of Severe Food Allergy on Food Allergy Quality of Life (FAQL) 15 • The Food Allergy Quality of Life Questionnaires (FAQLQ) are recommended as gold standard by EAACI. • Multi-dimensional items + demographics, symptoms, reaction history, diagnosis, prescription and use of an auto-injector. • The Food Allergy Independent Measure (FAIM) - perception of severity/chance of adverse outcome. • Used in general and treatment settings, cross-sectionally and longitudinally. • A minimal clinical important difference (MCID) score of 0.45/0.5. 16 How is severity defined in FAQL ? • Severe food allergy is typically defined as having a prescription for an EAI, or self-reported previous episodes of anaphylaxis (i.e. the symptoms “difficulty breathing”, “inability to stand”, collapse and/or loss of consciousness). 17 FAQL and Severity More adverse impact on FAQLQ: • Perceived severity (sensitivity, likelihood of severe reaction) & number of foods avoided. • Objective severity (history of anaphylaxis, number of symptoms experienced during a reaction) • Co-morbidity/poly-allergy + • Increasing Age (up to 18 years) & Female Gender • Caregivers classified as food insecure (FIS) Van der Velde 2012, DunnGalvin 2010; 2016; 2018, 2020; Goosens 2011, Tackett 2018 Warren 2015, Dantzer, 2018, Flokstra-deBlok 2010, 2012, 2015, Warren 2015, Gupta 2008, Acaster 2020 18 FAQL, Age, & Severity Challenges in growing up & living with food allergy Normal challenges in the developmental pathway Children (≤ 12 years) • All domains significantly correlated with child self-reported severity, life-threatening events, and number of reactions. Adolescents (12-18 years), • Perceived likelihood of accidental and severe reactions (FAIM) associated with self-reported (but not always objective) severity. Adults (19 years +) • Emotional Impact and Risk of Exposure domains strongest associations with self-reported severity Van der Velde 2012, DunnGalvin 2010; 2016; 2018, 2020; Goosens 2011, Tackett 2018 Warren 2015, Dantzer, 2018, Flokstra-deBlok 2010, 2012, 2015, Warren 2015, Gupta 2008, Acaster 2020 DunnGalvin et al., JACI -P 2018 DunnGalvin et al., JACI -P 2018 Higher relative increases for Food Anxiety Domain DunnGalvin et al., JACI -P 2018 22 Correlates : FAQL & Severity • Associated with caregiver anxiety, caregiver confidence, parent reported severity • Being ‘made to feel different’, teasing and bullying. • Lower FA ‘self-efficacy’ (SEFAQ) & confidence in self-management • Anxiety, Depression, relational difficulties (generic measures). DunnGalvin et al., 2020; Khaleva et al., 2020 Severe Food Allergy & Mental Health/ Anxiety UK population Norms for Generalised Anxiety Disorder vs Caregivers of FA Child 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 UK population Caregiver Normal Acaster et al., 2020 Mild Modrate/Severe 23 Severe Food Allergy & Mental Health/ Anxiety UK population Norms for Generalised Anxiety Disorder vs Caregivers of FA Child 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 UK population Caregiver Normal Acaster et al., 2020 Mild Modrate/Severe 24 Severe Food Allergy & Mental Health/ Anxiety Strength of relationship (R) between general anxiety in Caregivers and FAQL in children & teens 7 6 5 7 4 3 2 1 0 5 4 <6 years DunnGalvin et al., 2019 R 6-12 years >13 years 25 26 Where next for FAQL in the context of severe food allergy ? Fixed factors Individual Demographics Socio-economics Age Sex/gender Culture Language Disease Comorbidity Severity Treatment System Health policy Patient Activation Levels of care Time Care pathways Transition Longitudinal tracking Patient-physician interaction Knowledge/training Transition preparation & skills Quality of communication/partnership External Modifiable factors Internal Social/environmental Social Network Social Support (emotional, instrumental, informational, appraisal) Past experiences Behavioural Coping skills Coping style Psychological Health beliefs (incl. symptoms perception) Level of anxiety/ fear/ depression Normalisation Personality Traits Potential Correlates/ 27 & Severe Predictors of FAQL Food Allergy Outcomes FA Quality of life Selfefficacy Self-management Adherent/ Nonadherent Avoiding/ Not avoiding triggers Positive/ Poor problem solving & coping skills Level of Confidence Level of Symptom control Mental/Physical health Transition quality Level of risk New complementary measures The Food Allergy Coping and Emotions Scale (FACES) (available for all age groups & parents) will allow for quick and easy evaluation of coping and emotions for clinicians and researchers Designed to be complementary to FAQLQ. Will help in developing patient self-management strategies and improving outcomes. Short Forms – The FAQLQ-10 New online platform Researchers, clinicians, HCPs will be able to download the questionnaires, norms data, advice on use and scoring, papers and reports, and news 29 Gaps in research & practice • Additional assessment tools needed (e.g., food allergy-specific anxiety; immunotherapy experiences) • Clinical concerns must be recognized (e.g., acute stress disorder/PTSD related to anaphylaxis; feeding concerns/ARFID • Insufficient number of mental health clinicians equipped to work with food allergy families • Multi-disciplinary/Integrated Key points on FAQL & Severe Food Allergy Research on FAQL has provided a patient-centred perspective and innovative findings with applications for research, treatment & practice The most significant FAQL impact is the persistent fear of an adverse reaction …and the restrictions, vigilance, and planning that are necessary to minimize that chance. Environmental factors also play an important (and dynamic) role FAQLQ is now used globally which will allow for comparative and longitudinal research, with benefits for patients and families living with severe food allergy 30 31 EAACI guideline on the effective transition of adolescents and young adults with allergy and asthma 32 Thank you for listening ! Please address any comments and questions about the guideline to: a.dunngalvin@ucc.ie