Study Offers New Hope for Adults With Peanut Allergies

The new trial, the first to test this approach in adults, found that two-thirds of participants could eat the equivalent of five peanuts without reacting after slowly increasing the amount they eat over several weeks under medical supervision.
“This trial provides preliminary evidence that adults can be desensitized and that this improves quality of life. The average tolerated dose of peanuts increased 100-fold over the course of the trial,” said study author Stephen Till, MD, PhD, professor of allergy at King’s College London in England, in a press release.
Edwin Kim, MD, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of North Carolina and director of the UNC Food Allergy Initiative in Chapel Hill, views these results as a step forward because they show that oral immunotherapy can be an effective option for peanut allergy regardless of age.
“It does come with risk and can be difficult to do, so it should be discussed with your allergist to see if the benefit outweighs the risk, and if it might make sense for the patients,” says Dr. Kim, who was not involved in the research.
Some Study Subjects Eventually Tolerated 5 Peanuts a Day
For the trial, scientists from King’s College London and Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust recruited 21 individuals between the ages of 18 and 40 with a diagnosed peanut allergy.
Participants received an initial dose of 0.8 mg peanut flour mixed in with food, then roughly doubled the amount (1.5 mg) 30 minutes later, followed by another doubling to 3 mg an additional 30 minutes later.
Those who tolerated the initial 1.5 mg or 3 mg of peanut flour continued on a daily dose at home for two weeks. The dose was the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 percent of a whole peanut.
Then participants returned every two weeks for supervised doses of more peanut protein, increasing from 6 mg (about 2 percent of a whole peanut) to 1 gram (g), or four whole peanuts.
If participants could tolerate 50 to 100 mg of peanut protein, they were switched to eating whole peanuts, peanut butter, or peanut products, with the first dose administered under supervision of the clinical team.
Once participants reached a daily dose of 1 g without reaction, they remained on this dose or higher for four weeks. They continued daily dosing at home for at least three months.
The results, published this week in the journal Allergy, showed that by the end of the study, 14 of the 21 participants (67 percent) tolerated eating at least five peanuts a day (1.4 g).
The study authors noted that 95 percent of problematic reactions during the trial were mild.
Living With Peanut Allergy Can Cause Serious Distress
Kim says that patients with peanut allergy often have a never-ending fear that they may eat the wrong thing, such as a food that is cross-contaminated or mislabeled.
This fear can lead to social isolation and avoiding activities that others take for granted, such as eating out and attending parties.
“Constant fear of life-threatening reactions places a huge burden on people with peanut allergy,” noted study author Dr. Till in the press release.
Recognizing Limitations and Other Treatments
The trial results are limited because of the small number of participants and relatively short follow-up time. Further studies expanding to larger groups over a longer time period will be needed to demonstrate how truly effective this approach may be, according to Joao Pedro Matias Lopes, MD, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland.
“No one can guarantee this approach is long-lasting,” says Dr. Lopes, who was not involved in the study. He adds that this is not a cure and peanut allergy can come back once it “goes away.” Maintaining a tolerance for peanuts may require continued adherence to daily peanut consumption throughout a person’s life.
Other treatments for peanut allergy include:
- Avoiding foods that contain peanuts
- Receiving antibody injections (Xolair) to build up tolerance
- Preparing for a severe allergic reaction by carrying an emergency epinephrine autoinjector (EpiPen), or epinephrine nasal spray (Neffy). Epinephrine dilates the air passages, making it easier to breathe.
“It is great to get data showing success in protection from life-threatening peanut allergies in adults, but we still have a lot more work to do and the problem is very complex,” says Lopes.
- Hunter H et al. Oral Immunotherapy in Peanut-Allergic Adults Using Real-World Materials. Allergy. April 23, 2025.
- Peanut Allergy. Cleveland Clinic. November 11, 2024.
- Sicherer S et al. Therapy Boosts Peanut Tolerance in Allergic Kids. NIH Research Matters. February 25, 2025.
- Warren C et al. Prevalence and Characteristics of Peanut Allergy in Adults. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. June 2021.
- Couratier P et al. Allergy to Peanuts imPacting Emotions And Life (APPEAL): the impact of peanut allergy on children, adolescents, adults and caregivers in France. Allergy, Asthma, and Clinical Immunology. October 7, 2020.

Tom Gavin
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Tom Gavin joined Everyday Health as copy chief in 2022 after a lengthy stint as a freelance copy editor. He has a bachelor's degree in psychology from College of the Holy Cross.
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Don Rauf
Author
Don Rauf has been a freelance health writer for over 12 years and his writing has been featured in HealthDay, CBS News, WebMD, U.S. News & World Report, Mental Floss, United Press International (UPI), Health, and MedicineNet. He was previously a reporter for DailyRx.com where he covered stories related to cardiology, diabetes, lung cancer, prostate cancer, erectile dysfunction, menopause, and allergies. He has interviewed doctors and pharmaceutical representatives in the U.S. and abroad.
He is a prolific writer and has written more than 50 books, including Lost America: Vanished Civilizations, Abandoned Towns, and Roadside Attractions. Rauf lives in Seattle, Washington.