| Literature DB >> 28854915 |
Ralf S Mueller1, Thierry Olivry2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The gold standard to diagnose adverse food reactions (AFRs) in the dog and cat is currently an elimination diet with subsequent provocation trials. However, those trials are inconvenient and client compliance can be low. Our objective was to systematically review the literature to evaluate in vivo and in vitro tests used to diagnose AFR in small animals.Entities:
Keywords: Atopic; Canine; Feline; Food allergy; Gastroenteritis; IgE; In vitro; Serum test
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28854915 PMCID: PMC5577833 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-017-1142-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Number of tested animals and type of test performed
| Reference | Dogs/Cats with AFR | Control dogs/cats a | Type of test evaluated | Diet & provocation details known? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Allenspach et al. 2006 [ | 9 D | 5 D | CT | Yes |
|
Belova et al. [ | 15 C | 114 C | IgE | No |
|
Bethlehem et al. 2012 [ | 18 D | 18 D | PT, IgG, IgE | Yes |
|
Coyner & Schick 2016 [ | 1 D | 6 D | HT, ST | No |
|
Devaud et al. 2009 [ | 5 D | 7 D | LT | Yes |
|
Elwood et al. 1994 [ | 8 D | GT | ||
|
Favrot et al. 2017 [ | 14 D | 32 D | IgE | No |
|
Foster et al. 2003 [ | 91 D | IgE, IgG | No | |
|
Fujimura et al. 2011 [ | 13 D | 12 D | IgE, LT | No |
|
Guilford et al. 2001 [ | 16 C | 39 C | GT, IgE | Yes |
|
Hardy et al. 2014 [ | 8 D | 43 D | IgG, IgE | No |
|
Ishida et al. 2004 [ | 11 D | IDT, IgE, LT | Yes | |
|
Ishida et al. 2012 [ | 3 C | IDT, IgE, LT | Yes | |
|
Jackson et al. 2003 [ | 14 D | IDT, IgE | Yes | |
|
Jeffers et al. 1991 [ | 13 D | IDT, IgE | Yes | |
|
Johansen et al. 2017 [ | 24 D | PT | Yes | |
|
Kang et al. 2014 [ | 101 D | IgE | No | |
|
Kawano et al. 2013 [ | 12 D (no rechallenge) | IgE, LT | No | |
|
Kunkle & Horner 1992 [ | 9 D | 61 D | IDT | No |
|
Mueller & Tsohalis 1998 [ | 8 D | 8 D | IgE | Yes |
|
Ohmori et al. 2007 [ | 1 D | IDT, IgE | Yes | |
|
Puidgemenot et al. 2006 [ | 9 D | 3 D | IDT | Yes |
|
Vaden et al. 2000 [ | 6 D | GT, IgE | Yes | |
|
Wilhelm & Favrot 2005 [ | 5 D | 32 D | IgE, IgG | No |
C cat, D dog, GT gastroscopic food sensitivity testing, HT hair testing, IDT intradermal testing with food antigens, IgG serum testing for food-specific IgG, IgE serum testing for food-specific IgE, PT patch testing with food antigens, ST salivary testing
ahealthy or allergic, but not adverse food reaction
Accuracy, positive and negative predictabilitya of various tests in privately owned dogs with naturally occurring adverse food reactions based on provocation with individual food allergens
| Accuracy | Positive predictability | Negative predictability | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Intradermal testing with food antigens [ | 63–76% | 60–67% | 62–77% |
|
Serum testing for food-specific IgE [ | 58–87% | 15–100% | 61–86% |
|
Serum testing for food-specific IgG [ | 77% | 35% | 84% |
|
Lymphocyte proliferation tests [ | 94% | 100% | 93% |
|
Patch testing with food antigens [ | 81–90% | 63–75% | 88–99% |
a The accuracy was calculated by dividing the number of correct results by the number of all results verified, positive predictability by dividing correctly positive results by the total number of positive results and negative predictability by dividing correctly negative results by the total number of negative results
Accuracy, positive and negative predictability of various tests in privately owned cats with naturally occurring adverse food reactions
| Accuracy | Positive predictability | Negative predictability | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Serum testing for food-specific IgE [ | 20% | 0% | 20% |
|
Lymphocyte proliferation tests [ | 80% | 100% | 50% |
|
Intradermal tests [ | 47% | 100% | 27% |