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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This Drug Story episode explores the fascinating and alarming connection between food allergies and the EpiPen, revealing one of medicine's biggest blunders. Host Thomas Goetz takes listeners through the surprising discovery of anaphylaxis in 1901 by French scientists studying Portuguese man o' war jellyfish, to the development of epinephrine as a treatment, and ultimately to the creation of the EpiPen auto-injector. (00:58) The most shocking revelation: medical recommendations in 2000 to avoid feeding babies potentially allergenic foods like peanuts may have inadvertently caused millions of children to develop food allergies. (25:00)
Thomas Goetz is a senior impact fellow at the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health and the host of Drug Story podcast. He served as executive editor at WIRED magazine from 2001 to 2013, leading the publication to a dozen National Magazine Awards. His writing has been repeatedly selected for Best American Science Writing and Best Technology Writing anthologies, and he has authored bestselling books on health and technology.
Dr. Gideon Lack is a professor of pediatric allergy at King's College London whose groundbreaking research revolutionized food allergy prevention. His LEAP study provided definitive evidence that early exposure to peanuts prevents allergies rather than causing them, directly contradicting decades of medical guidance and leading to new recommendations endorsed by Dr. Anthony Fauci in 2017.
Contrary to decades of medical advice, exposing babies to potentially allergenic foods as early as 4 months dramatically reduces allergy risk. (48:54) Dr. Gideon Lack's LEAP study found that children who consumed peanuts early had only a 1.9% allergy rate compared to 14% in those who avoided peanuts. This 86% reduction rivals the effectiveness of successful vaccines. The key insight: the immune system needs early exposure to learn tolerance, and avoidance actually sensitizes children to develop allergies later.
The American Academy of Pediatrics' 2000 "one-two-three rule" (avoid dairy until age 1, eggs until age 2, peanuts until age 3) was based on the precautionary principle rather than scientific evidence. (25:00) This well-intentioned guidance created a feedback loop: more avoidance led to more allergies, which led to more fear and avoidance. The lesson for professionals is that "better safe than sorry" approaches require rigorous scientific validation, especially when dealing with complex biological systems.
Dr. Lack's breakthrough came from questioning why Israeli children, who eat peanut-flavored Bamba snacks from infancy, had dramatically lower peanut allergy rates than UK children. (27:26) Rather than accepting established medical dogma, he designed rigorous studies to test his hypothesis. This demonstrates the importance of cross-cultural observation and the courage to challenge established practices when data suggests alternative approaches.
Mylan's EpiPen pricing strategy demonstrates how companies can exploit captive markets through strategic positioning. (41:36) By training teachers only on EpiPens (not competitor devices), lobbying for school requirements, and creating exclusive purchasing agreements, Mylan achieved "lock-in" that allowed them to raise prices from $109 to over $600 without losing customers. This illustrates how regulatory capture and monopolistic practices can emerge even in life-saving industries.
Despite Dr. Lack's compelling 2008 observational study showing lower allergy rates in Israel, medical practice didn't change until his randomized controlled trial provided definitive proof. (47:49) The LEAP study's rigorous methodology—640 children followed for 5 years—was necessary to overcome decades of established medical practice. This highlights that in high-stakes fields, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and observational studies, while valuable, may not be sufficient to drive policy change.