Skincare interventions in infants for preventing eczema and food allergy: A cochrane systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Maeve M Kelleher - , Imperial College London (Author)
  • Suzie Cro - , Imperial College London (Author)
  • Eleanor Van Vogt - , Imperial College London (Author)
  • Victoria Cornelius - , Imperial College London (Author)
  • Karin C Lodrup Carlsen - , University of Oslo (Author)
  • Håvard Ove Skjerven - , Oslo University Hospital (Author)
  • Eva Maria Rehbinder - , Oslo University Hospital (Author)
  • Adrian Lowe - , University of Melbourne (Author)
  • Eishika Dissanayake - , University of Wisconsin-Madison (Author)
  • Naoki Shimojo - , Chiba University (Author)
  • Kaori Yonezawa - , The University of Tokyo (Author)
  • Yukihiro Ohya - , National Center for Child Health and Development (Author)
  • Kiwako Yamamoto-Hanada - , National Center for Child Health and Development (Author)
  • Kumiko Morita - , Keio University (Author)
  • Michael Cork - , University of Sheffield (Author)
  • Alison Cooke - , University of Manchester (Author)
  • Eric L Simpson - , Oregon Health and Science University (Author)
  • Danielle McClanahan - , Oregon Health and Science University (Author)
  • Stephan Weidinger - , University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Campus Kiel (Author)
  • Jochen Schmitt - , Center for Evidence-Based Healthcare (Author)
  • Emma Axon - , University of Nottingham (Author)
  • Lien Tran - , Imperial College London (Author)
  • Christian Surber - , University Hospital Basel (Author)
  • Lisa M Askie - , University of Sydney (Author)
  • Lelia Duley - , University of Nottingham (Author)
  • Joanne R Chalmers - , University of Nottingham (Author)
  • Hywel C Williams - , University of Nottingham (Author)
  • Robert J Boyle - , University of Nottingham (Author)

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Eczema and food allergy start in infancy and have shared genetic risk factors that affect skin barrier. We aimed to evaluate whether skincare interventions can prevent eczema or food allergy.

DESIGN: A prospectively planned individual participant data meta-analysis was carried out within a Cochrane systematic review to determine whether skincare interventions in term infants prevent eczema or food allergy.

DATA SOURCES: Cochrane Skin Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase and trial registries to July 2020.

ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA FOR SELECTED STUDIES: Included studies were randomized controlled trials of infants <1 year with healthy skin comparing a skin intervention with a control, for prevention of eczema and food allergy outcomes between 1 and 3 years.

RESULTS: Of the 33 identified trials, 17 trials (5823 participants) had relevant outcome data and 10 (5154 participants) contributed to IPD meta-analysis. Three of seven trials contributing to primary eczema analysis were at low risk of bias, and the single trial contributing to primary food allergy analysis was at high risk of bias. Interventions were mainly emollients, applied for the first 3-12 months. Skincare interventions probably do not change risk of eczema by age 1-3 years (RR 1.03, 95% CI 0.81, 1.31; I2 =41%; moderate certainty; 3075 participants, 7 trials). Sensitivity analysis found heterogeneity was explained by increased eczema in a trial of daily bathing as part of the intervention. It is unclear whether skincare interventions increase risk of food allergy by age 1-3 years (RR 2.53, 95% CI 0.99 to 6.47; very low certainty; 996 participants, 1 trial), but they probably increase risk of local skin infections (RR 1.34, 95% CI 1.02, 1.77; I2 =0%; moderate certainty; 2728 participants, 6 trials).

CONCLUSION: Regular emollients during infancy probably do not prevent eczema and probably increase local skin infections.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)402-418
Number of pages17
JournalClinical and Experimental Allergy
Volume51
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85101531645

Keywords

Keywords

  • Dermatitis, Atopic/prevention & control, Emollients/therapeutic use, Food Hypersensitivity/prevention & control, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Skin Care, Skin Diseases, Infectious/epidemiology, Soaps, Water Softening