| Literature DB >> 23282674 |
Louise Bjerremann Jensen1, Milene Andersen, Per Stahl Skov, Lars K Poulsen, Carsten Bindslev-Jensen.
Abstract
Peanut-allergic children might be at risk for reactions to other legumes. However, it is not always possible to perform multiple oral food challenges in children. On the basis of patient case history, in vitro diagnostic tests, and eventually food challenges, we aimed at developing an algorithm for risk assessment of possible clinical reactions to other legumes (soybean, lupine, fresh, and blanched green pea). Seventy-five consecutive patients with a positive oral food challenge to peanut were included in the study. All tests were run as part of the routine allergy examination. A high proportion of patients and/or caretakers refused the administered legume oral food challenges. Obtained diagnoses from histamine release did not correlate significantly to the outcome of the algorithm. Interestingly, threshold from peanut challenges did not correlate with the risk assessment.The algorithm presented in this study can be used when advising peanut-allergic children and their caretakers about what other legumes to avoid in the diet.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 23282674 PMCID: PMC3651022 DOI: 10.1097/WOX.0b013e3181865f83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Figure 1Flow sheet of the algorithm. The numbers in each box correspond to the number of patients in the risk assessment of possible reactions to soybean/lupine/fresh green pea/blanched green pea, respectively. Eventually, the patients are divided into high- or low-risk groups. Pea challenges were only performed with fresh green pea. The outcome of the fresh pea challenge was used to classify the patients as either high or low risk for both fresh and blanched green pea.
Frequencies of Positive Diagnostic Tests in Peanut-Allergic Patients
| Legume | SPT | HR | sIgE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peanut | 97% (68/70) | 92% (45/49) | 97% (69/71) |
| Soybean | 28% (17/60) | 19% (9/47) | 58% (37/64) |
| Lupine | 45% (23/51) | 80% (43/54) | 47% (22/47) |
| Fresh green pea | 41% (17/41) | 91% (39/43) | 48% (23/48) |
| Blanched green pea | 16% (6/38) | 5% (2/43) |
Values in parentheses are the number of patients with positive outcome of the tests divided by the number of patients having the tests performed.
Concordances for Pairwise Comparison of the Diagnostic Tests: SPT, HR, and sIgE
| Legume | SPT vs HR, % | SPT vs IgE, % | HR vs IgE, % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peanut | 88 | 97 | 90 |
| Soybean | 80 | 70 | 57 |
| Lupine | 67 | 67 | 57 |
| Fresh green pea | 53 | 63 | 52 |
| Blanched green pea | 79 | 63 | 57 |
Mean SPT, Mean HR Class, and Median sIgE for Patients Grouped Into Positive, Negative, or Unknown Case History (Number of Patients in Brackets)
| Positive Case History | Negative Case History | Unknown Case History | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soybean | SPT | 1 (21) | 2.5 (41) | |
| HR | 0.1 (19) | 0.5 (28) | ||
| sIgE | 0.3 (21) | 0.7 (45) | ||
| Lupine | SPT | --(0) | 4 (2) | 2.5 (54) |
| HR | --(0) | 0 (1) | 1.3 (25) | |
| sIgE | --(0) | --(0) | 0.3 (47) | |
| Fresh green pea | SPT | 2.7 (7) | 1.5 (23) | 2.8 (30) |
| HR | 1.3 (6) | 1.0 (24) | 1.2 (25) | |
| sIgE | 1 (6) | 0.3 (20) | 0.4 (25) | |
| Blanched green pea | SPT | 1.2 (27) | 1.9 (32) | |
| HR | 0.2 (29) | 0.2 (26) | ||
| sIgE | 0.3 (28) | 0.9 (23) |
Figure 2Comparison between high- and low-risk classification and HR class for the soybean, lupine, fresh green pea, and blanched green pea. Black lines represent the median.
Figure 3Box plot depicting the comparison between high- and low-risk classification and threshold doses of the peanut challenge.