Friday, February 27, 2026

Canada: Early Exposure to Peanuts, Fish, and Eggs Reduces Allergy Risk in Babies: Study

 Toronto Star, NICOLE IRELAND, 16 Feb 2026

A new Cana­dian study says giv­ing babies pea­nuts, eggs, fish and other com­mon food aller­gens early and con­sist­ently decreases the risk they'll be aller­gic to them.

Senior author Dr. Derek Chu [pictured right]  says research­ers ana­lyzed more than 190 food allergy stud­ies from around the world to identify the strongest risk factors in devel­op­ing food aller­gies.

Their find­ings, pub­lished this month in JAMA Pedi­at­rics, found that delay­ing the intro­duc­tion of pea­nut­  con­tain­ing foods until babies were more than 12 months old doubled their like­li­hood of becom­ing aller­gic to the nut.

The study showed sim­ilar res­ults for fish and eggs.

Babies who have other aller­gies, asthma, wheez­ing or eczema in their first year of life — or have an aller­gic par­ent or sib­ling — are also at higher risk of devel­op­ing a food allergy.

Chu says it's espe­cially import­ant to intro­duce poten­tial aller­gens early to those higher­ risk chil­dren to try to pre­vent food aller­gies.

“The longer we delay, the higher the risk of food allergy is,” said Chu, who is an aller­gist­ immun­o­lo­gist and assist­ant pro­fessor at McMas­ter Uni­versity in Hamilton, Ont.

“Early intro­duc­tion is when baby's ready. They've got the co­ordin­a­tion to sit up and chew with their mouth, and they're curi­ous about food. For many, that'll be around age four months, maybe five months, maybe six months.”

Food Allergy Canada cau­tions that pea­nuts are a chok­ing haz­ard but a safe way to intro­duce them is by mix­ing pea­nut but­ter with hot water, cool­ing the mix­ture and adding it to soft foods the baby is already eat­ing such as infant cer­eal or puréed fruits and veget­ables.

The exec­ut­ive dir­ector of the non­profit organ­iz­a­tion ded­ic­ated to help­ing people liv­ing with food aller­gies was a co­author of the study and endorsed the res­ults.

“This pub­lic­a­tion con­firms that food allergy devel­op­ment in chil­dren is influ­enced by mul­tiple factors,” said Jen­nifer Ger­dts in an emailed state­ment.

“Early intro­duc­tion and con­tin­ued inclu­sion of aller­genic foods — cent­ral to our `Eat Early, Eat Often' guid­ance — has shown prom­ising res­ults in redu­cing food allergy risk, but more needs to be learned about addi­tional ways to pre­vent food allergy.”

Chu said it's import­ant to not only intro­duce aller­genic food early, but to have babies con­tinue to eat it con­sist­ently.

The guid­ance matches food allergy recom­mend­a­tions from the Cana­dian Pe­di­at­ric Soci­ety, which sug­gests babies eat the newly intro­duced food a few times a week “to main­tain tol­er­ance.”

“The risk for a severe reac­tion at first expos­ure in infancy is extremely low. Pre­empt­ive in­ office screen­ing before intro­du­cing aller­genic foods is not recom­men­ded,” the pedi­at­ric soci­ety pos­ted on its web­site in Dec. 2021.

The find­ing could be use­ful by rein­for­cing the import­ance of intro­du­cing aller­genic food to babies who had to take anti­bi­ot­ics to treat ill­ness early in life, Chu said.

In addi­tion to pea­nuts, eggs and fish, Chu said it's import­ant for par­ents to give babies other poten­tially aller­genic food that is com­mon in their house­hold early, which could include tree nuts, dairy, wheat, soy, ses­ame and shell­fish.