| Literature DB >> 26839629 |
Thanh D Dang1, Rachel L Peters1, Katrina J Allen2.
Abstract
There is emerging evidence that children with egg and cow's milk allergy who can tolerate these allergens cooked in baked goods are more likely to develop tolerance. As a result a hypothesis has arisen that exposure to egg and milk in baked goods may hasten tolerance development; however, it is unclear whether children who develop tolerance do so because they have ingested low levels of egg or milk in baked products. An alternative explanation for the improved prognosis in those who can tolerate food allergens in the baked form is that tolerance to egg and milk in baked goods is simply an indicator of a phenotype that is less likely to be persistent. We discuss the role that the baked egg or milk allergy phenotype plays on predicting tolerance development and suggest that it is the phenotype of the disease rather than exposure to altered allergens that is the strongest predictor of tolerance development.Entities:
Keywords: Baked; Component resolved diagnostics; Egg allergy; Food allergy; IgE; Immunotherapy; Milk allergy; Tolerance
Year: 2016 PMID: 26839629 PMCID: PMC4727327 DOI: 10.1186/s40413-015-0090-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Fig. 1Conformational epitopes and sequential epitopes: conformational epitopes are destroyed when the shape of a protein is altered by cooking whereas sequential epitopes are not [40]
Comparison of HealthNuts and Consortium of Food Allergy Research studies on the natural history of egg allergy [10, 32]
| CoFAR | HealthNuts | |
|---|---|---|
| Baseline | ||
| Sample size | 213 | 140 |
| Age range baseline | 3-15 months (38 % >12 m) | 12 months |
| Population | Subgroup of multi-centre observational study which recruited infants with a history of milk or egg allergy deemed at high risk of peanut allergy. | Subgroup of longitudinal population based cohort |
| Definition of egg allergy at baseline | Positive OFC; or previous reaction and egg sensitisation (SPT > = 3 mm and/ or sIgE > = 0.35 kU/L); or eczema flare following egg ingestion and sIgE > 2 (95 % PPV) | Positive OFC and egg sensititsation (SPT > = 2 mm and/ or sIgE > = 0.35 kU/L) |
| Gender (male) | 70 % | 61 % |
| OFC at baseline | Some (but not specified how many) 13 % diagnosed based on eczema flare | All, irrespective of SPT |
| Baked egg allergy phenotype | Parent-report of ingestion with or without reaction 6 months after recruitment | Baked egg OFC offered to all participants (parent-report in those who declined, 16 % of total) |
| Eczema at baseline | 92 % | 63 % |
| SPT at baseline | <5(24 %) | > = 4 mm 55 % |
| > = 5 (76 %) | ||
| sIgE at baseline | <2 (37 %) | > = 1.7 48 % |
| 2-10 (34 %) | ||
| > = 10 (29 %) | ||
| OFC / reaction symptoms at baseline | Eczema flare 13 % | Skin symptoms 79 % |
| Skin symptoms 44 % | Other systems 21 % | |
| Other systems 44 % | ||
| Other food allergy | 52 % | 25 % |
| Follow-up | ||
| Determination of egg allergy resolution | OFC (45 %) or home introduction (55 %) | OFC irrespective of SPT (100 %) |
| Resolution | 49 % | 47 % |
| Age resolution | 72 months | 27 months |
| Resolution among baked egg tolerant phenotype | 71 % | 54 % |
| Resolution among baked egg allergic phenotype | 45 % | 13 % |
| Resolution stratified by baked egg ingestion | No ingestion (45 %) | Frequent ingestion (61 %) |
| Ingestion with reaction (57 %) | Infrequent ingestion (41 %) | |
| Ingestion without reaction (71 %) | No ingestion (17 %) | |
| SPT as a predictor of outcome | <5 vs >10 HR 1.995 95 % CI 1.23-3.24 | > = 4 mm OR 3.34 95 % CI 1.52-7.38, p 0.003 |
| 5- < 10 vs >10 HR 0.860 95 % CI 0.55-1.35 | ||
| sIgE as a predictor of outcome | <2.0 vs >10 HR 3.874 95 % CI 2.25–6.66 | > = 1.7kU/L OR 29.46 95 % CI 8.86–97.92 p < 0.001 |
| 2–10 vs >10 HR 2.064 95 % CI1.19–3.59 | ||
| Other predictors of outcome | Severity of baseline eczema egg reaction class, sex, IgG4, | Baked egg allergy and frequency of baked egg ingestion |
| Other variables considered, not predictive | Baseline age, race, breastfeeding, other food allergy, asthma or rhinitis | Eczema, other food allergies, OFC symptoms and dose, FLG |
FLG filaggrin, HR hazards ratio, OFC oral food challenge, OR odds ratio, sIgE specific IgE, SPT skin prick test