Transform Your Allergy Experience with Personalized SLIT
Discover a safer, more effective way to manage food allergies with our specialized sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) treatments. Experience improved tolerance and peace of mind with our expert care.
Understanding the SLIT Process
1
Daily Dosing
Administer small, precise doses of allergen drops under the tongue daily to build tolerance.
2
Gradual Desensitization
Over time, your immune system adapts, reducing sensitivity to allergens.
3
Improved Safety
SLIT offers a safer alternative to traditional therapies, with milder reactions and easier management.
Foods We Can Address with SLIT
Peanut
Manage peanut allergies effectively with our SLIT program.
Tree Nuts
Includes cashew, walnut, hazelnut, and more for comprehensive nut allergy care.
Milk
Address milk allergies with our tailored SLIT approach.
Egg
Effective SLIT treatment for egg allergies, enhancing tolerance.
Wheat
Manage wheat allergies with our innovative SLIT solutions.
Soy
Reduce soy allergy reactions through personalized SLIT therapy.
Sesame
Comprehensive SLIT treatment for sesame allergies.
Additional Foods
Explore SLIT options for various other food allergies.
Discover the Benefits of SLIT
Experience a revolutionary approach to allergy management with Sublingual Immunotherapy (SLIT). This treatment offers a safer, needle-free alternative to traditional allergy shots, allowing you to administer treatment conveniently at home. With SLIT, you can enjoy a reduced risk of severe allergic reactions and improved peace of mind for you and your family. Our personalized treatment plans ensure long-term improvement in tolerance, enhancing your quality of life significantly.
Why Choose The Allergy Group?
At The Allergy Group, we pride ourselves on delivering expert care close to home. Our team of board-certified allergists has been serving the Treasure Valley for decades, offering personalized SLIT treatment plans tailored to your specific needs. With convenient clinic locations in Boise, East Boise, Meridian, Eagle, Nampa, and Caldwell, we ensure easy access to top-notch allergy care. Meet our dedicated providers who are committed to helping you achieve better health and wellness.
Common Questions About SLIT
What is sublingual immunotherapy?
Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is a form of immunotherapy that involves putting a liquid form of the food you are allergic to under the tongue. This has also been referred to as “allergy drops,” and it is an alternative treatment to oral immunotherapy (OIT). SLIT is delivered under the tongue, held there for two minutes, and then swallowed. SLIT has been used in patients with airborne allergies (hay fever and asthma) for many years in Europe and has recently gained some interest in the United States. A few SLIT environmental allergens (dust mites, grass, and ragweed) have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but none for food allergies.
How does SLIT work?
Food proteins placed under the tongue come in contact with oral mucus membranes and are then recognized by special immune cells called dendritic cells. These cells communicate with other immune cells (T lymphocytes) to hyposensitize you or reduce your allergies.
What kind of allergies can be treated with SLIT?
The same kind of food allergies we’ve been treating with OIT, i.e., peanut, tree nuts, egg, milk, wheat and sesame.
Is SLIT safe?
Over the past 20 years, the safety of SLIT has been well documented. Fatal reactions to SLIT have not been reported to date, and serious reactions are extremely rare. Mild side effects, such as an itchy mouth, occur in the majority of people initially and tend to resolve over time. Moderate side effects have been documented (1 in about every 12,000 doses), including: eye itching, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, asthma symptoms and hives.
The strong safety profile of SLIT is largely due to the nature of the oral mucosa being conditioned to tolerate various proteins on a daily basis, such as foods and resident bacteria. As a result, the sublingual mucosa has few pro-inflammatory cells, such as mast cells (which trigger allergic reactions in the skin, nose and lungs). This helps to explain why SLIT, when compared to OIT, is less likely to cause a severe, generalized allergic reaction.
Who could (or should) receive SLIT?
At the present time, food OIT is a popular method of treatment, but the ease and safety of SLIT makes it an attractive alternative, especially in the highly allergic person, teens and older, or someone who has struggled with OIT.
What are the advantages of SLIT compared to OIT?
SLIT has been shown to produce fewer adverse reactions than OIT. The early phase buildup drops have a sweet taste since the food is diluted in glycerin. Some patients have taste aversion with OIT since they are consuming the very food that not only caused a reaction in the past, but also the one they have been told and conditioned to avoid for many years. This can become a difficult psychological hurdle for some people. Placing ~1/10th of a teaspoon under the tongue rarely creates such anxiety.
What are the disadvantages of SLIT compared to OIT?
SLIT will make you safe from accidental exposure to the food you’re allergic to, but often does not allow free-eating of the food. SLIT patients are asked to return to the clinic annually for the first several years for an oral food challenge to measure how much they can tolerate. At any of those time points, the patient is welcome to switch over to the safely consumed dose of food orally for ongoing treatment. Patients on staple food SLIT, egg, milk and wheat, often make that choice so they can incorporate these common foods into their diet.
Why is SLIT not yet FDA approved?
The drops are a food, not a drug, so approval is only necessary if a company wanted to market a specific, proprietary product. A trial is being done with a peanut product under the tongue and a food-based toothpaste. There is a peanut capsule approved by the FDA for OIT and work is being done with foods delivered via a skin patch (epicutaneous immunotherapy or EPIT).
How is SLIT taken?
Liquid food is self-administered at home, under the tongue. The early doses of the food are prepared here in the office and given to you from a bottle. You will use a small syringe to draw up a very small amount (less than 1/10th of a tsp) and squirt it under the tongue. The liquid is held under the tongue for approximately two minutes before being swallowed. If you are on more than one food, the 2nd food can be taken two minutes after the 1st. We ask that you don’t eat or drink for five minutes after dosing. In general, children have to be at least five years old to be able to cooperate with the procedure. You will receive a series of 2-3 low doses on the updose visits and instructed to stay on the top dose at home once daily. There will be four updose visits until you reach your maintenance dose. For foods that are available in a convenient liquid form, milk, egg white liquid, and tree nut milks, you’ll obtain the food from your local grocery for maintenance dosing.
Other foods commonly used in SLIT, peanut, sesame and wheat, use diluted flour that we will provide to you in bottles good for six months.
How long do I have to wait after taking SLIT before eating and being active?
Typically, we ask patients to wait at least five minutes before eating or drinking, just to allow for additional absorption time for the drops. We ask that you don’t over -exert yourself for 30 minutes after dosing.
Can I travel with SLIT?
Yes. They are very easy to travel with and can go anywhere you go. The bottles have a small enough volume to be carried through airport security. Since taking the dose requires only a few minutes out of your day, it is very easy to continue your treatment no matter where you are, or how long you are away.
Does SLIT need to be refrigerated?
Yes. Remember, several foods are store bought milk. The diluted flour also does better when refrigerated.
Does my insurance cover SLIT?
Food challenges are a covered service, so the series of doses you will receive in the clinic will be billed to your insurance as such. However, SLIT is considered a non-covered medical service, so there is an upfront program fee that will be out of pocket. There will also be a minor fee for refill bottles for those on diluted flour solutions. The front office can review all charges with you prior to starting SLIT.



