The Itch: Allergies, Asthma, Eczema & Immunology

The Itch: Allergies, Asthma & Immunology

A podcast bringing you easily digestible information on all things allergies, asthma eczema, and immunology

  1. 3d ago

    #164 - New Chronic Hives Guidelines: A Look at What's Changing

    In this journal club episode, we break down the draft of the Chronic Urticaria Guidelines: 2026 AAAAI/ACAAI Joint Task Force (JTF) on Practice Parameters GRADE- and Institute of Medicine-based recommendations. We explain what counts as chronic hives, why the guideline leans on second-generation non-drowsy antihistamines, what to do when those are not enough, and what is new for both adults and kids. At the time of recording, the draft was open for comments; it closed for comments on June 30, 2026. What we cover in our episode about the new chronic hives guidelines What chronic hives are: A plain-language look at the two main types, spontaneous and inducible, plus angioedema (swelling) that can come with them. What a draft guideline is: Why the guideline is still being reviewed, and how comments can help shape it before it is final. What's new for kids: How children fit into the guideline, and why most do well without advanced treatments. The antihistamine shift: Why the guideline favors non-drowsy, second-generation antihistamines and moves away from older, sedating ones. When antihistamines are not enough: If higher-dose antihistamines do not work, the recommended advanced option is to start omalizumab (Xolair) plus two newer additions: dupilumab (Dupixent) and remibrutinib (Rhapsido). Download Infographic More hive resources  Read the draft guideline and comment details (ACAAI) Track your symptoms: Get the CU Download to access the UAS7 and the Urticaria Control Test (UCT) What are chronic hives? Chronic Urticaria Toolkit Living with Chronic Hives *********** The Itch Review, hosted by Dr. Gupta, Kortney, and Dr. Blaiss, explores allergy and immunology studies, breaking down complex research in conversations accessible to clinicians, patients, and caregivers. Each episode provides key insights from journal articles and includes a one-page infographic in the show notes for easy reference. *********** Made in partnership with The Allergy & Asthma Network. Thanks to Opella for sponsoring today’s episode.  This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider for any medical concerns.

    32 min
  2. Jun 26

    #163 - Understanding Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria: Hives Demystified

    Join Kortney and Dr. Payel Gupta as they unpack chronic spontaneous urticaria. Together, they define what hives actually are, explain how CSU is different from an allergic reaction and other types of hives, and walk through what is happening under your skin to cause all that itching. This episode was originally published June 6, 2024. We re-released it on June 25, 2026 with a new intro as the perfect foundation before our episode on the new chronic urticaria guidelines. Do you get hives and have no idea why? Then this episode is for you. What we cover in this episode about chronic hives: What hives really are. Urticaria is the medical word for hives, and the two signs are that it itches and it comes and goes. CSU versus other hives. How CSU differs from inducible hives (CINDU) and from an allergic reaction. Histamine and the itch. Why histamine drives the swelling and itch, and why scratching feels so good. What makes hives flare. CSU has no true trigger, but stress and other culprits can set off your mast cells. The Itch Podcast Hives Episodes Explore our full catalog of hives episodes Diagnosis and the basics Ep. 76 Diagnosing Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria Ep. 128 Is Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria an Autoimmune Disease? Ep. 90 Challenges in Diagnosis and Treatment of Chronic Urticaria in Skin of Color Treatment Ep. 78 Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria Treatments Ep. 131 What Is a BTK Inhibitor? Ep. 147 The REMIX Trial: Remibrutinib for Chronic Hives   Ep. 116 Why Fexofenadine Is Considered a Truly Non-Sedating Antihistamine Living with chronic hives Ep. 148 How Do You Know Your Chronic Hives Are Under Control?  Ep. 122 Mortality in adult patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria: A real-world cohort study  Ep. 80 Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria Myths and Misconceptions Ep. 79 Living with Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria: A patient story Ep. 91 A Patient's Experience with Chronic Urticaria and Skin of Color Ep. 107 Hives in the Latinx Community ______ This podcast is made in partnership with Allergy and Asthma Network.  We thank Novartis for originally sponsoring this episode. This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute professional medical advice. Any mention of brands is also informational and not an endorsement. Always consult with your healthcare provider for any medical questions or concerns.

    23 min
  3. Jun 12

    #161 - BREATHE: The Digital Asthma Management Tool

    Most adults with asthma never receive education about managing their condition, even though it is proven to help with better asthma control. The reason comes down to access. In this episode, we explore a digital platform called BREATHE, built from the ground up to change that. Dr. Payel Gupta and Kortney sit down with the two lead authors behind “Development and Usability of a Digital Asthma Self-management Education Platform: BRinging Exercise, Asthma Assessments, and TeacHing to Everyone (BREATHE)” published in JACI: In Practice, March 2026. De De Gardner and Sheryl Flynn, CEO, talk about how BREATHE was developed, what the app includes, and what the data showed after patients and providers put it to the test. What we cover in this episode about asthma self-management Asthma self-management education and why most adults never receive it. How BREATHE was built using a user-centered design process, shaped by what adults with asthma and healthcare providers said they actually needed. What the BREATHE platform includes: asthma lessons, validated control assessments, and an Asthma Action Plan, all in one app, in English and Spanish. What the usability study found: adults rated the app in the 81st percentile, providers rated the dashboard in the 76th percentile, and 80% considered making a behavior change after just two weeks. Where the program is now and where it is going, including how to access the free Allergy and Asthma Network Virtual Asthma Coaching Program today. Allergy and Asthma Network Virtual Asthma Coaching Program and the Spanish program. This podcast is made in partnership with the Allergy & Asthma Network.

    37 min
  4. Jun 9

    #160 - Meet the President of the AAAAI, Dr. Carla Davis

    We are continuing our series of interviewing thought leaders in the field of allergy and immunology. Dr. Gupta and Kortney sit down with Dr. Carla Davis, the president of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. What we cover in this episode about Dr. Davis and the AAAAI What the AAAAI is and why it matters to patients. A 7,000-member organization working behind the scenes to support allergy and immunology care across the US and around the world. Dr. Davis's path to the presidency. From her early experiences advocating as a fellow to her major pivot from Baylor to Howard University, the journey that shaped her priorities. Initiative: AAAAI Advocate. A new platform connecting patients and physicians directly to their legislators, making it easy to share your story and push for better access to allergy care. Initiative: AAAAI AI Task Force. A dedicated group bringing AI tools into allergy care, including AAAAI Ignite, a Netflix-style platform that helps members find and curate personalized allergy content. Initiative: The Collaborative Translational Mechanistic Research Seed Award. A $100,000 grant pairing laboratory scientists with clinical allergists to move new discoveries directly into patient care. More resources American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology AAAAI Advocate platform Allergy & Asthma Network health equity resources   This podcast is made in partnership with the Allergy & Asthma Network.

    34 min
  5. May 29

    #159 - Food Allergy Anxiety in Teens: Risk-Taking, Social Pressure, and How to Help

    Kortney and Dr. Payel Gupta are joined by Tamara Hubbard, MA, LCPC, a licensed clinical professional counselor and food-allergy parent. Together, they dig into what food allergy anxiety actually looks like in teenagers, why some teens take more risks as they get older, and what parents can do to support their teens without making things worse. What we cover in this episode is about food allergy anxiety in teens: What makes teenagers a high-risk group for food allergy reactions. Independence is increasing at the exact same time parental oversight is decreasing, and that combination creates real safety concerns. What food allergy risk-taking actually looks like. It is not always what parents expect, and some of it is just teens figuring out how to belong. Food allergy social anxiety is its own distinct experience. The fear of looking different, being a burden, or standing out can drive behavior just as much as the fear of a reaction. Why parental anxiety matters more than most parents realize. The way parents talk about food allergies often directly affects how teens handle them. How to build confidence and ownership in your teen. What to do when a teen is either too anxious or not anxious enough. *********** Made in partnership with The Allergy & Asthma Network. Thanks to Genentech and Kaléo for sponsoring today’s episode.  This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider for any medical concerns.

    44 min
  6. May 22

    #158 - Managing Food Allergy Anxiety in Kids

    Food allergy anxiety in kids is real, and it does not always look like fear. It can show up as tantrums, clinginess, control-seeking behaviors, or a child who refuses to eat at a restaurant. Child life specialist and therapist Kelsey Mora joins Kortney and Dr. Payel Gupta to unpack what is really going on.  What we cover in our episode about managing anxiety in kids Food allergy anxiety does not always look like anxiety. Tantrums, clinginess, and control-seeking behaviors can all be signs that a child is struggling. Language matters from the start. How parents explain food allergies to young children can build confidence or quietly reinforce fear. Separation anxiety and food allergies are connected. Dependence on parents can make it harder for kids to navigate school, parties, and social situations on their own. Practicing independence at home builds real-world skills. Exposure to allergens in a safe home environment teaches confidence and communication skills kids need everywhere else. Passing parental anxiety onto kids. Co-regulation starts with the caregiver, when parents are anxious, kids have a harder time calming down. Helpful resources Food allergy anxiety information from Allergy & Asthma Network Kelsey's practice and services: childlifetherapist.com  Kelsey's workbooks and resources: themethodworkbooks.com  *********** Made in partnership with The Allergy & Asthma Network. Thanks to Genentech and Kaléo for sponsoring today’s episode.  This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider for any medical concerns.

    44 min
  7. May 15

    #157 - Dating, Kissing, and Intimacy with Food Allergies

    Mia Silverman, food allergy advocate, joins us to talk about the real emotional and practical side of dating with food allergies. From what the research says about kissing risks to setting boundaries to why your allergies might actually be the best filter you have. What we cover in this episode about dating with food allergies When to tell someone about your food allergies. Mia shares why she brings up her allergies early and how she works it into her dating app profile without making it a big deal. Fear of rejection. Mia opens up about being ghosted and bullied, and how she learned to reframe rejection as a filter rather than a failure. The risks of kissing with food allergies. Dr. Gupta breaks down what the research actually says about allergens in saliva and what your partner can do to reduce the risk. Intimacy beyond kissing. From latex-free condoms to body fluids, Dr. Gupta covers what food allergy patients need to know about being safely intimate with a partner. Date ideas and setting boundaries. Mia shares practical tips for early dates, setting food-allergy rules, and keeping the conversation open without making it feel overwhelming. *********** Made in partnership with The Allergy & Asthma Network. Thanks to Genentech and Kaléo for sponsoring today’s episode.  This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider for any medical concerns.

    40 min
4.3
out of 5
92 Ratings

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A podcast bringing you easily digestible information on all things allergies, asthma eczema, and immunology

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