A simple question about peanut allergies led Dr. Gideon Lack to a discovery that would change the way the world understands food allergies. What began as curiosity turned into decades of research that reshaped medical advice for millions of parents.
The question that started a revolution
When Dr. Gideon Lack stood before an audience of allergists and pediatricians years ago, he asked what seemed like a straightforward question: how many of them had treated a child with a peanut allergy? In most countries, nearly every hand would go up. Peanut allergies had become one of the most common—and frightening—childhood conditions, affecting about two percent of children in the United States and showing similar numbers in the United Kingdom.
But when Lack posed the same question at a conference in Tel Aviv, only a handful of doctors raised their hands. Out of around two hundred professionals, barely three had treated such a case. The discrepancy baffled him. Jewish children in London, who shared similar genetic backgrounds with those in Israel, showed much higher rates of peanut allergy. What, then, explained this dramatic difference?
That puzzling moment set Lack on a journey that would span more than fifteen years and ultimately overturn one of medicine’s most deeply held beliefs about allergy prevention.
Discovering an unexpected pattern
The answer, as Lack later found, was hiding in plain sight. While spending time in Israel, he noticed something unique about local eating habits. Parents routinely fed their babies “Bamba,” a popular peanut-flavored puff snack, as early as four to six months of age. The product contained significant amounts of peanut protein, and Israeli children consumed it regularly and enthusiastically.
In contrast, parents in the United Kingdom were being told the exact opposite: to avoid exposing their infants to peanuts or other potential allergens until they were several years old. The logic behind this advice seemed sound at the time—if a food could trigger allergies, perhaps delaying exposure would prevent sensitization. But the strikingly low rate of peanut allergies among Israeli children suggested that this long-standing approach might be completely wrong.
Curious, Lack and his team compared the diets of around 10,000 children—half in Israel and half in London—who shared similar ancestry. The results were undeniable: peanut allergies were almost ten times more common among the British group. The only clear difference was when peanuts were introduced into the diet. Israeli babies were consuming the equivalent of ten peanuts a week by their first birthday, while British babies had virtually none.
Although the finding was compelling, it was still an observation. To turn correlation into proof, Lack needed rigorous scientific evidence.
Challenging decades of medical advice
At the time, the notion of deliberately feeding peanuts to infants seemed almost reckless. Many doctors and parents worried that such an approach would provoke allergic reactions rather than prevent them. Funding agencies were hesitant, and ethical concerns loomed large. Nevertheless, Lack persisted.
In 2008, with support from the U.S. National Institutes of Health, his team launched a large, carefully controlled study called the LEAP trial (Learning Early About Peanut Allergy). The research focused on infants who were already at high risk of developing allergies because of severe eczema or existing egg allergies. The children were randomly divided into two groups: one would avoid peanuts entirely, while the other would be encouraged to eat small amounts of peanut-based foods regularly from as early as four months of age.
Enrolling the 640 individuals spanned a two-year period, and the research tracked their progress for half a decade. The findings, upon their disclosure, were remarkable. Within the cohort of children who abstained from peanuts, almost 14% had developed peanut allergies by their fifth birthday. For the group that incorporated peanuts into their diet early on, this figure plummeted to under 2%. Even for youngsters who had exhibited initial indicators of sensitivity, consistent peanut intake reduced the likelihood of developing a severe allergy by over two-thirds.
The data revealed an over 80% reduction in peanut allergy rates among those introduced to peanuts early—a breakthrough that fundamentally challenged existing medical guidance.
From discovery to transformation
When the results of the LEAP study were released in 2015 in The New England Journal of Medicine, they represented a pivotal moment in the fields of allergy investigation and childhood nutrition. For an extended period, official recommendations had advised postponing contact with allergenic foods. However, the data now unequivocally demonstrated that early exposure, rather than evasion, was the crucial factor in developing tolerance.
The implications were enormous. The American Academy of Pediatrics, which had once advised parents to wait until age three before introducing peanuts, reversed its stance. Updated guidelines issued in 2017 encouraged introducing peanut-containing foods as early as four to six months for most babies.
The effects of this change were swift and measurable. A 2024 study published in Pediatrics found that peanut allergy rates among U.S. children under age three had dropped by more than 40% since the new guidelines took effect. That translates to tens of thousands of children avoiding what had once been a lifelong and potentially life-threatening allergy.
The continuous advancement of medical knowledge
For Dr. Lack, the experience was both humbling and affirming. He admitted that, like many other doctors, he had once followed the avoidance strategy with his own children. Yet he also emphasized that the winding, self-correcting nature of science is what ultimately drives progress.
“The history of medicine is a series of zigzags,” he explained. “We make recommendations based on the best knowledge we have, and when the evidence changes, so should we.”
That philosophy continues to guide his research. Today, Lack co-leads a new project known as the SEAL study, once again challenging traditional assumptions. This time, the focus is on the connection between eczema and food allergies.
For a long time, medical professionals thought that food sensitivities caused eczema. However, current research indicates the opposite: infants who experience early onset eczema might be more prone to developing food allergies later on. The SEAL study seeks to investigate if proactive eczema treatment during the initial weeks of life—employing moisturizers and gentle topical remedies—could avert the emergence of allergies altogether.
The science behind early exposure
The concept driving this new research is known as the “dual-exposure hypothesis.” It proposes that how the immune system encounters food proteins determines whether it perceives them as safe or dangerous. Exposure through the digestive system, when a baby eats food, teaches the immune system to tolerate it. But exposure through broken or inflamed skin, as often happens with eczema, may have the opposite effect, leading to sensitization and allergic reactions.
Dr. David Hill, a pediatric allergist at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a colleague in this line of research, described the immune system as a gatekeeper. “When babies eat foods early, the immune system learns that these proteins are normal,” he said. “But when those same proteins reach the body through damaged skin, the immune system can mistake them for threats.”
Lack often explains the idea with a metaphor: “If I knock on your front door and ask to come in, you’ll probably greet me politely. But if I break through a window, you might respond differently.”
If the SEAL investigation validates this hypothesis, it has the potential to revolutionize not only the avoidance of allergies but also global pediatric dermatological and dietary approaches.
Redefining how we think about allergies
The progression from that initial presentation in Tel Aviv to the contemporary comprehension of preventing food allergies illustrates how scientific breakthroughs can overturn established beliefs. What started as a localized point of interest evolved into one of the most impactful transformations in pediatric healthcare in recent times.
Dr. Lack’s work has already changed the lives of countless families. Where once parents were told to avoid peanuts out of fear, they are now encouraged to introduce them early and safely—often under pediatric supervision. The research has also inspired further studies on other allergenic foods, from eggs to tree nuts, suggesting that early introduction could help reduce the global burden of allergies more broadly.
For Lack and his colleagues, the goal has never been merely to publish findings but to create real-world change. As he often reminds his audiences, science advances not by being perfect but by being willing to admit when it’s wrong. The key, he believes, is staying open to evidence, even when it contradicts everything we thought we knew.
From the joyful sounds of Israeli infants enjoying Bamba to the subsequent laboratory investigations, the narrative of preventing peanut allergies exemplifies perseverance, modesty, and the impact of challenging preconceived notions. It serves as a reminder that in scientific endeavors, much like in life, advancement seldom follows a direct path—yet each new finding propels us nearer to comprehension, recovery, and prophylaxis.
