Treating EoE as an Allergist with Dr. Priya Bansal
Manage episode 440713359 series 2927358
Description:
Co-hosts Ryan Piansky, a graduate student and patient advocate living with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) and eosinophilic asthma, and Holly Knotowicz, a speech-language pathologist living with EoE who serves on APFED’s Health Sciences Advisory Council, interview Dr. Priya Bansal about an allergist’s role in treating EoE.
In this episode, Ryan and Holly discuss with Dr. Priya Bansal her career in internal medicine, pediatrics, allergies, and immunology. She emphasizes the importance of patient advocacy and encourages parents to not accept the diagnosis that their child is a picky eater when the child is refusing food. Dr. Bansal talks about the process of reaching a diagnosis and EoE treatment options. Listen to this episode for more information about living with EoE and how an allergist can help.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is designed to support, not replace the relationship that exists between listeners and their healthcare providers. Opinions, information, and recommendations shared in this podcast are not a substitute for medical advice. Decisions related to medical care should be made with your healthcare provider. Opinions and views of guests and co-hosts are their own.
Key Takeaways:
[:51] Ryan Piansky introduces the episode and co-host, Holly Knotowicz. Ryan and Holly will talk about eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) and how an allergist can help.
[1:25] Holly introduces Dr. Priya Bansal, an internist, pediatrician, and allergist, who is on the faculty of Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine and practices at the Asthma and Allergy Wellness Center in Illinois.
[2:06] Dr. Bansal does research and consulting and in a private practice. Throughout her 20-year career, she has enjoyed treating chronic and difficult-to-treat diseases.
[3:06] Now, she enjoys patient advocacy, advocating for EoE, and working with the American College of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology House of Delegates and the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
[3:38] For new listeners, EoE is an allergic and immune disease of the esophagus. With EoE, eosinophils are found in the lining of the esophagus, causing inflammation, and inviting more eosinophils. EoE is a chronic inflammation of the esophagus.
[4:30] A child might have symptoms of food refusal, regurgitation, and abdominal pain. Adults may feel food sticking. The standard for finding eosinophils is endoscopy with six biopsies; two proximal, two mid, and two distal.
[5:24] It is a patchy disease, so the allergist will want to partner with a gastroenterologist who will do the biopsies at the three different levels.
[6:10] Holly tells how she didn’t get diagnosed until she was in her mid-twenties. Her doctors thought she was vomiting for attention. They were not familiar with EoE. She was diagnosed as an adult when working at a major hospital.
[7:00] An allergist at a big academic center, working together with a team of doctors from multiple disciplines, may find it easier to diagnose EoE. Many allergists are not working on multi-disciplinary teams.
[7:34] An allergist can look at the resources in the community. Dr. Bansal has several gastroenterology centers that refer patients to her. They partner with Dr. Bansal on the diagnosis and treatment.
[8:02] In other clinics, it may be the gastroenterologist who takes the lead in treatment and refers to the allergist to manage the allergic disease that exists on top of the EoE.
[8:21] As a patient, the diagnosis process depends on where you live. If you have symptoms, don’t give up. When Dr. Bansal started, she had to ask pathologists to stain biopsies for eosinophils. Today, staining is done routinely; she doesn’t need to ask for it.
[9:07] You are your best advocate. If somebody doesn’t believe you, that doesn't mean somebody else won’t.
[9:22] Holly is a feeding specialist in Maine. In the three years she has been there, more than 100 people whom she has referred have been diagnosed with EoE.
[10:24] Dr. Bansal says that whether you see an allergist or a GI doctor, depends on which specialty takes the lead on EoE in your community. If you do not have a good rapport with your doctor, make a change. Partner with a doctor who advocates for you.
[11:59] Dr. Bansal advises that when seeing a different doctor, to print out your biopsies to bring. If you are using a biologic therapy, print out the scope that you had right before your biologic therapy, too. That biopsy is your golden ticket if you switch insurance companies.
[13:02] Dr. Bansal uses Care Everywhere, but she wants to see prints of your labs anyway. Not everyone opts into Care Everywhere. She likes the Patient Portal and she is looking forward to someday having a universal portal.
[13:43] Dr. Bansal recommends patients sign up with the Portal for their allergist and GI doctor to facilitate communication.
[15:14] Patients can scan their printed scope reports and share them with their care team, such as by putting them on a keychain USB drive, in a photo album on a phone, or a scanning app on a phone. There are different ways to store the data.
[15:39] Ryan describes how his mother organized his medical history, including all prescriptions, every procedure he has had, and all the doctors he has seen. Ryan was diagnosed at two-and-a-half years old, after visits to six or seven doctors.
[17:30] Dr. Bansal participated in an ACAAI video about the difficulty of diagnosing EoE. The video is linked in the show notes.
[17:41] It is a challenge to diagnose EoE. Some children have milder forms of the disease. When it’s familial, some patients think it’s normal for the family. Food sticking is not normal for everyone.
[20:08] The patient may live in an area with a lack of access to a knowledgeable specialist. Sometimes the patient just doesn’t know who to see. When you make an appointment, call ahead and ask if they treat EoE at that office. Not all allergists do.
[22:18] A podcast episode with Dr. Emily McGowan told of her research study on the prevalence of EoE in urban vs. rural areas. It’s not about rural vs urban but about having access to a specialist. Rural patients couldn't find a specialist.
[22:44] Ryan notes that you can use the Specialist Finder at APFED.org/specialist to see if there is a specialist in your area.
[23:12] With younger patients, Dr. Bansal finds that food refusal is a sign of EoE; that, and abdominal pain. By age 10, patients can say they are having trouble swallowing or that food is getting stuck.
[24:28] Holly finds that pediatricians are often not aware that picky eating and food aversion or food refusal are different situations. Food aversion comes from painful swallowing. Dr. Bansal is trying to create an understanding of EoE among pediatricians.
[26:15] Another sign Dr. Bansal watches for is FIRE (Food-induced Immediate Response of the Esophagus), which is different from PFAS (Pollen Food Allergy Syndrome). FIRE is a narrowing of the esophagus; PFAS is an oral issue.
[27:13] As we get more research and learn more about the disease state and the nuances, the hope is that we could educate pediatricians on how to differentiate a picky eater from a patient with food aversion, using compensation mechanisms to swallow.
[28:15] Ryan compares this episode to a “greatest hits” episode, referring to FIRE and compensation mechanisms in the pediatric patient population. Those are great episodes for our listeners to go back and hear again.
[29:01] When a patient has an EoE diagnosis, Dr. Bansal practices shared decision-making with the patient. She outlines four options for the patient. The first option is eliminating dairy and known food allergens from the diet.
[31:01] With a food-elimination diet, ask your nutritionist what you need to eat more of because of the foods you are eliminating. If you’re taking away dairy, you want to make sure you’re getting calcium and Vitamin D. If you’re taking away wheat, you need zinc.
[31:20] The second option Dr. Bansal talks about with her patients is a high-dose proton pump inhibitor (PPI). The third option is topical budesonide, swallowed with honey. Budesonide is a 12-week prescription. Flovent can also be swallowed.
[32:46] The fourth option is dupilumab. Insurance companies may require you to fail option 2, the PPI, for eight to 12 weeks before paying for this.
[33:40] Dr. Bansal wants patients to understand that they can change between treatment options but she wants a patient to stay on an option for eight to 12 weeks and get a scope to see how it works before switching to another option. Follow-through is necessary.
[34:42] Listeners can watch the video of Dr. Jonathan Spergel’s presentation at EOS Connection 2024 to learn more about eliminating milk for EoE and PPI-responsive EoE patients.
[35:14] Dr. Spergel also touched on nutritional deficiencies from some diet therapies. APFED just recorded a great podcast episode on that, as well.
[35:31] Dr. Sara Bluestein made a presentation at EOS Connection on eosinophilic asthma which included an overview of biologic treatments, not just for EoE but for many eosinophilic disorders.
[36:09] Holly loves Dr. Bansal’s team approach with patients, where she acts as the coach, helping guide them toward the decision that will work best for their lives.
[36:20] As a feeding specialist, Holly is excited about the dupilumab option for patients who are on feeding tubes for severe inflammation in the esophagus.
[38:18] Budesonide oral is for 11 and up and dupilumab is for ages one and up. Any doctor who will give a patient the proper care may prescribe these to the patient. For dupilumab, the success rate goes up over time, starting at around 60% to around 80%.
[39:27] You want to get the biologic prescribed and approved for EoE. If it is approved for atopic dermatitis, the dosing is too weak for EoE and it fails at two-week dosing.
[39:56] Biologics need to be continued even when symptoms go away, as the symptoms will return. These two medicines are immunomodulators, not immunosuppressants so they don’t increase the risk of other diseases.
[41:50] Patients need biopsies to get therapy.
[42:13] Ryan reminds listeners about the trans-nasal endoscopy podcast episode and the episode on the string test, which don’t require sedation.
[43:06] Dr. Bansal notes that in trials, benralizumab failed as a treatment for EoE. It brought down the eosinophil count but it didn’t treat the patient’s dysphagia symptoms. Some specialists are wondering if there’s more to EoE than just the eosinophils.
[44:30] Mepolizumab also reduces eosinophils. It is not known if it is effective against EoE. Tezepelumab is undergoing EoE trials now. It reduces eosinophils in the first two weeks. The data is not out on its effectiveness as an EoE treatment.
[44:51] At EOS Connection 2024, Dr. Bluestein gave a great talk on eosinophilic asthma, including information about biologic treatments. More information is coming out about them and their trials for other eosinophilic diseases.
[45:27] Dr. Bansal talks about how great it is to have new biologic options for people who tried an elimination diet, PPIs, and budesonide without relief from dysphagia. There was a void in the space, which is what dupilumab filled.
[46:27] Allergists think that at least 70% of EoE patients have at least one other atopic disease, such as eczema, allergic rhinitis, polyps, or asthma. In pollen season some patients’ EoE gets worse.
[47:11] Dr. Bansal tells patients she doesn’t want them dripping and draining into the esophagus. She doesn’t want them to add inflammation where there is already inflammation. So she treats their allergies.
[47:44] After a dilation, a patient may feel cured. It’s just a stopgap; they’ll be back if they don’t treat their EoE. Dr. Bansal hopes that allergists treat any allergies as well as the EoE, so the allergies don’t have a negative impact on the EoE.
[49:41] There’s no harm in getting an evaluation and seeing if there is something you could be doing to minimize the overall disease impact on your body and keep you healthier overall. Inflammation anywhere is never a good thing.
[50:41] Ryan and Holly thank Dr. Bansal for joining the podcast today.
[51:01] Dr. Bansal’s last word: “I would advise parents to trust your instincts. If you think that something’s wrong, even if somebody’s telling you it’s not wrong, get to the right people. Some insurances allow you to make an allergist appointment without a referral.”
[52:18] If an allergist tells you there is a problem, know that they have years of experience with allergy patients. Dr. Bansal has hundreds of patients with EoE in the clinic. Create a partnership with an allergist.
[53:12] If you would like to learn more about EoE, please visit APFED.org/EOE. If you’re looking to find a specialist like Dr. Bansal, you can use APFED’s Specialist Finder at APFED.org/specialist.
[53:29] If you’d like to connect with others impacted by eosinophilic diseases, please join APFED’s online community on the Inspire Network at APFED.org/connections.
[53:39] Ryan thanks Dr. Bansal again for joining us on Real Talk: Eosinophilic Diseases. Dr. Bansal thanks Ryan and Holly. Holly would like to clone Dr. Bansal with all her enthusiasm. Holly also thanks Education Partners, Bristol Myers Squibb, GSK, Sanofi, and Regeneron for supporting this episode.
Mentioned in This Episode:
Priya Bansal M.D.Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine
Rush University Medical Center
Video: Diagnosing and treating pediatric EoE, ACAAI
Video: Diagnosing and treating adult EoE, ACAAI
“One-food versus six-food diet elimination therapy for EoE…”, The Lancet
APFED EOS Connection Conference 2024
APFED on YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram
Real Talk: Eosinophilic Diseases Podcast
Education Partners: This episode of APFED’s podcast is brought to you thanks to the support of Bristol Myers Squibb, GSK, Sanofi, and Regeneron.
Tweetables:
“We have other things that we’re working with. We’re trying to find biomarkers and other tests that are not as invasive but for right now, it’s the endoscopy with six biopsies; two proximal, two mid, and two distal.” — Dr. Priya Bansal
“As we get more research and learn more and more about the disease state and the nuances and some of the things that we’re seeing, obviously then, the hope is that we could educate people.” — Dr. Priya Bansal
“You’ve got to have your biopsies. I know everyone hates them, everyone hates the scope, it’s uncomfortable, it’s annoying. I get it, but you need it to get therapy.” — Dr. Priya Bansal
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