
Early allergen introduction, microbiome research, and immune programming studies suggest food allergy prevention may begin during infancy.

Nicole Chase, MD, is a board-certified allergist/immunologist at St. Paul Allergy Asthma, Minneapolis VA Health Care System (part-time), and an associate professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School.

Early allergen introduction, microbiome research, and immune programming studies suggest food allergy prevention may begin during infancy.

Chase discusses how the FDA’s labeling change aligns epinephrine nasal spray (neffy) with other weight-based epinephrine formulations.

Chase explains how the weight-based labeling update for epinephrine nasal spray (neffy) may improve access, adherence, and real-world use in young children.