
Researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford have found that using oral immunotherapy for treating peanut allergy leads to changes in the DNA of the patient's immune cells and this could be used as a basis for a simple blood test that can monitor the long-term effectiveness of the therapy. Peanut allergy, like other food allergies, currently has no cure. Scientists are conducting clinical trials of doctor-supervised ...
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