| Literature DB >> 24118190 |
T Umasunthar1, J Leonardi-Bee, M Hodes, P J Turner, C Gore, P Habibi, J O Warner, R J Boyle.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Food allergy is a common cause of anaphylaxis, but the incidence of fatal food anaphylaxis is not known. The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of fatal food anaphylaxis for people with food allergy and relate this to other mortality risks in the general population.Entities:
Keywords: anaphylaxis; food allergy; mortality; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24118190 PMCID: PMC4165304 DOI: 10.1111/cea.12211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Allergy ISSN: 0954-7894 Impact factor: 5.018
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart showing results of literature search.
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Setting | Case identification/numbers | Source of denominator population | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bock [ | Colorado USA 1990–1991 | Emergency department survey – identified cases of probable fatal food anaphylaxis. 1 fatality | Colorado population statistics | 2/4 |
| Foucard & Malmheden Yman [ | Sweden 1993–1996 | Survey of physicians, with case notes scrutinized by a single investigator. 4 fatalities | Sweden population statistics | 1/4 |
| Calvani et al. [ | Lazio, Italy 2000–2003 | Hospital and emergency department information system: ICD codes 708.0, 989.5, 995.0, 995.2, 995.3, 995.4, 995.6, 999.4. 1 fatality | Lazio population aged 0–17 cited in paper | 2/4 |
| Pumphrey & Gowland [ | United Kingdom 1992–2009 | Prospective registry using national statistics, network of coroners, allergy charity to identify cases. Death certificate coding for anaphylaxis. 104 fatalities | UK population statistics | 3/4 |
| Bock et al. [ | USA 2001–2006 | Prospective registry. Cases reported by physicians, media and FAAN and confirmed by a structured questionnaire. 31 fatalities | US population statistics 2001–August 2006 | 2/4 |
| Liew et al. [ | Australia 1997–2005 | National Mortality Database – Death certificate ICD-10 codes T78.0, T78.2, T80.5, T88.6, T78.1, T78.4, X23, X25. Review of cases via Coroner reports and media archives. 7 fatalities | Mid-2001 Australian population figures used, multiplied by 9 | 2/4 |
| Simon & Mulla [ | Florida, USA 1996–2005 | Death certificate search ICD-9 codes 995.0, 999.4 for 1996–1998; ICD-10 codes T50.9, T63.2, T63.4, T63.6, T63.9, T78.0, T78.2, T80.5, T88.6 for 1999–2005. All death certificates reviewed by a single author. 7 fatalities | Florida population estimates cited in paper | 2/4 |
| Bock [ | USA 1994–1999 | Prospective registry. Cases reported by relatives, in response to advertising. 32 fatalities | US population statistics | 2/4 |
| Lin et al. [ | New York State USA 1990–2006 | Statewide hospitalization database: ICD-9 code 995.6. 4 fatalities | New York State population aged 0–19, calculated from anaphylaxis rates cited in paper | 2/4 |
| Salter et al. [ | Ontario, Canada 1986–2000 | Death certificate search for anaphylaxis as cause of death. 32 fatalities | Ontario population statistics | 3/4 |
| Simons et al. [ | Canada 2000–2001 | Survey of paediatricians [Canadian Paediatric Surveillance Programme]. 1 fatality | Canada population aged 0–17 in 2000 | 0/4 |
| Levy et al. [ | Israel 2004–2011 | Discussion with regional allergists, search of national media. 4 fatalities | Israel population estimates cited in paper | 0/4 |
| Tanno et al. [ | Brazil 2008–2010 | Death certificate search using extensive ICD-10 codes, and review of all records where anaphylaxis was a possible cause of death. 12 fatalities | Brazilian population calculated from anaphylaxis rates cited in paper | 2/4 |
Quality assessment based on Newcastle-Ottawa scale for Cohort Studies [6].
Extended dataset kindly provided by study author.
Fig. 2Estimated rate of fatal food anaphylaxis for a food-allergic person (a), a food-allergic person aged 0–19 (b) and a peanut-allergic person (c) expressed as incidence rate per million person-years (micromort).
Fig. 3Funnel plots to assess risk of publication bias in analysis of overall fatal food anaphylaxis incidence rate (a) and fatal food anaphylaxis incidence rate at age 0–19 (b).
Fig. 4Estimated risk of fatal food anaphylaxis for a food-allergic person (a) or food-allergic person aged 0–19 (b), compared with other population risks. Continuous bar represents mean with 95% confidence interval; dotted bar is the range of point estimates from individual studies. Where reference risks vary markedly between European and United States populations, they are stated separately. Otherwise, reference risks are for a United States population.
Fatal food anaphylaxis incidence rates – calculated using different estimated food allergy prevalence rates
| Estimated food allergy prevalence | Mean (95% CI) mortality rate (micromorts) | |
|---|---|---|
| All fatal food anaphylaxis | Food allergy prevalence 4% [ | 1.35 (0.71, 2.59) |
| Food allergy prevalence 3% [ | 1.81 (0.94, 3.45) | |
| Food allergy prevalence 2% [ | 2.71 (1.42, 5.17) | |
| Fatal food anaphylaxis in young people (age 0–19) | Food allergy prevalence 10.4% [ | 1.18 (0.63, 2.22) |
| Food allergy prevalence 3.9% [ | 3.25 (1.73, 6.10) | |
| Food allergy prevalence 2% [ | 6.13 (3.25, 11.56) | |
| Fatal peanut anaphylaxis | Peanut allergy prevalence 2.9% [ | 0.73 (0.38, 1.43) |
| Peanut allergy prevalence 1% [ | 2.13 (1.09, 4.16) | |
| Peanut allergy prevalence 0.5% [ | 4.25 (2.17, 8.31) |
Estimated prevalence rates are taken from the meta-analysis of Rona et al. [2], for symptoms of food allergy and a positive allergy test, or for some estimates from more recent studies [1,7].