Of 74 responders, 56 (43%) achieved remission at the first step in which milk and wheat were eliminated, results show, while an additional 10 had remission after the step up to four-food elimination, and another 8 had remission after the final step up to six-food elimination.
Dr. Spechler said his current take on diet therapy for eosinophilic esophagitis would be to start with the two-food elimination diet.
That first step alone identified about three-quarters of the patients who eventually would respond to the step-up approach in the Molina-Infante study, he observed.
For patients who do not respond and are motivated to continue, Dr. Spechler said he would move up to the four-food elimination diet, which identified about 90% of patients who eventually responded.
However, Dr. Spechler said he would consider the final step-up only in “exceptionally highly motivated” patients, since that step seems to identify very few additional responders.