| Literature DB >> 31871534 |
Elham Hossny1, Motohiro Ebisawa2, Yehia El-Gamal1, Stefania Arasi3, Lamia Dahdah3, Rasha El-Owaidy1, Cesar A Galvan4, Bee Wah Lee5, Michael Levin6, Santiago Martinez7, Ruby Pawankar8, Mimi L K Tang9,10,11, Elizabeth H Tham5, Alessandro Fiocchi3.
Abstract
Food allergy (FA) is currently a significant health care problem in the developing world. Widely varying study populations and methodologies, the use of surrogate markers such as self report or hospitalization rates due to anaphylaxis rather than objective methods, limits robust estimation of FA prevalence in low income settings. Also, allergy is under-recognized as a clinical specialty in the developing world which compromises the chance for accurate diagnosis. In this review, most published data on food allergens from developing or low income countries are displayed. The diagnostic challenges and limitations of treatment options are discussed. It seems that FA is an under-appreciated health care issue in the developing world, and accurate determination of its burden in low-income settings represents an important unmet need. Multicenter surveillance studies, using standardized methodologies, are, therefore, needed to reveal the true extent of the problem and provide epidemiological clues for prevention. Preventive strategies should be tailored to fit local circumstances in different geographic regions. In addition, studying the gene environment interactions and impact of early life microbiota on the expression of FA in developing communities would be worthwhile. Efforts and resources should be directed toward public health education and training of health care providers dealing with food allergic patients.Entities:
Keywords: Allergens; Developing countries; Diagnosis; Food allergy; Low income; Treatment; Unmet needs
Year: 2019 PMID: 31871534 PMCID: PMC6909084 DOI: 10.1016/j.waojou.2019.100089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Some published data on food allergens from the African Continent.
| Country (Alphabet) | Allergens reported | Study Design | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Congo | Any food (5%); crab (3.1%), wheat (1.2%), and soy (0.5%). | 423 patients with allergic rhinitis SPT | Nyembue et al. |
| Egypt | Peanut (7% sensitization) and 4% OFC proven cases. | 100 allergic children SPT and OFC in SPT positive cases | Hossny et al. |
| Fish (13.8% sensitization) | 87 allergic children Self report, SPT and serum specific IgE | Hossny et al. | |
| Banana (7.5% sensitization although 50%) | 80 allergic children SPT, PPT, and serum specific IgE | El-Sayed et al. | |
| Sesame seed (2.2%) | 90 allergic children SPT and serum specific IgE | Hossny et al. | |
| Hen's egg white (28.8%) | 80 allergic children Self report, SPT and serum specific IgE | Reda et al. | |
| Ghana | Any food (5%); mostly peanut and pine apple | 1431 school children SPT (5%); Serum specific IgE (35%) | Obeng et al. |
| Mauritius | Any food (20%); mostly sea food | General population (150 adults) Self report | Pugo-Gunsam et al. |
| Morocco | Eggs (4.2%), peanuts (2.5%) and wheat flour (0.4%) | 442 allergic patients Self report | Ouahidi et al. |
| Any food (45%) | 160 atopic children SPT | Ghadi et al. | |
| Fish (2.5%) mostly children | 200 allergic patients (90% adults) Serum specific IgE | Bouhsain et al. | |
| Mozambique | Any food (19.1%) mostly seafood (54.8%), meat (13%) and fruit/vegetables (13%) | General population (509 adults) Self report | Lunet et al. |
| Nigeria | Seafood (14.7%), cereals/legumes (11.4%), vegetable oil (1.1%) and pork (1.6%) | General population (972 children and adults) Self report | Achinewu |
| Any food (2.5%) mostly eggs, crayfish, cow milk | 1019 patients with atopic dermatitis Self report | Nnoruka | |
| South Africa | Crustaceans (50%), mollusks (30%) and a variety of fish species (20%) | 80 Seafood allergic patients Serum specific IgE | Lopata and Jeebhay |
| Peanut sensitization (5%); none proven allergic | 151 South African adolescents SPT and OFC | Du Toit et al. | |
| Egg white (3.3%), peanut (1.9%) and milk (1.9%). | 211 urban high school black children SPT | Levin et al. | |
| Peanut (26%), egg (24%), fish (3%), milk (2%), cashew nut (1%) | Children with atopic dermatitis OFC | Gray and Kung | |
| Food sensitization (66%) and food allergy (40%); egg (25%) and peanut (24%) Ethnic difference in peanut allergy (15% in Black Africans; 38% in others) | 100 children with atopic dermatitis (59 Black Africans; 41 mixed ethnicity) SPT, serum specific IgE and OFC | Gray et al. | |
| Challenge-proven IgE-mediated FA to any food (2.5%); sensitization (9.6%) Peanut: proven allergy 1.6%; sensitization 4.5% | 544 randomly selected children from child care education facilities SPT and OFC | Basera et al. | |
| Egg white (25%) | 100 children with atopic dermatitis (59 Black Africans; 41 mixed ethnicity) SPT, serum specific IgE and OFC | Gray et al. | |
| Food sensitization: Egg (42.8%), cow milk (3.5%), peanut (25%) | 29 children with atopic dermatitis SPT | Mahdavinia et al. | |
| Urban citizens: food allergy (2.5%); raw egg white (1.9%), cooked egg (0.8%), peanut (0.8%), cow's milk (0.1%), fish (0.1%). Rural citizens: food allergy (0.5%) all to egg | 1185 children from urban and 398 from rural Cape Town. SPT and OFC in SPT positive cases | Botha et al. | |
| Tanzania | Any food (16.7%) | 400 Children and adults (general population) Self report | Justin-Temu et al. |
| Togo | Any food (4.5%) | 220 outpatients witrh pruritus Self report | Pitche et al. |
| Tunisia | Whole egg (38%) | 5 out of 13 children with atopic dermatitis SPT | Masmoudi et al. |
| Zimbabwe | Apple (24%), tomato (24%), soy (22%), crab (22%), peanut (20%) | 40 allergic patients Serum specific IgE | Westritschnig et al. |
PPT: prick-prick test; SPT: skin prick test; OFC: open food challenge. The percentage in brackets refers to the positivity in the studied sample
Some published data on food allergens from Asia.
| Country (alphabet) | Allergens | Study Design | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | Shrimp; crab; mango; cow's milk; dairy products; egg | Population-based survey | Zeng et al. |
| Hong Kong | Peanut; seafood; eggs; milk | Emergency Department visits for anaphylaxis | Wang et al. |
| Indonesia (no published population data) | <5 years Cow's milk and egg >5 years Seafood, eggs, nuts | WAO global survey | Prescott et al. |
| Korea | Overall: Peanut (0.22%); hen's egg (0.21%); cow's milk (0.18%); buckwheat (0.13%) 6–7 year olds: Hen's egg (0.25%); peanut (0.22%); cow's milk (0.16%); sesame (0.15%) 9–10 year olds: Peanut (0.34%); hen's egg (0.32%); cow's milk (0.24%); buckwheat (0.1%) 12–13 year olds: Cow's milk (0.26%); peanut (0.23%); hen's egg (0.19%); buckwheat (0.17%) 15–16 year olds: Buckwheat (0.18%); pork (0.17%); hen's egg (0.13%); peanut (0.13%) Food-induced anaphylaxis: Peanut (0.08%); cow's milk (0.07%); buckwheat (0.06%); hen's egg (0.06%) | Population-based survey | Kim et al. |
| Milk; egg white; walnut; wheat; buckwheat | Anaphylaxis cases at 23 hospitals | Lee et al. | |
| Malaysia (no published population data) | <5 years Cow's milk, egg, peanut, tree nuts, sea food >5 years Sea food, chicken, peanut, egg | WAO global survey | Prescott et al. |
| Pakistan | Wheat; egg; corn; chicken | Adult allergic patients at two allergy centres | Inam et al. |
| Seafood; dry fruits (peanut etc), egg | Anaphylaxis cases at a tertiary hospital | Khan et al. | |
| Philippines | 14–16 years Shellfish (5.12%); peanut (0.43%); treenuts (0.3%) | Population-based (survey) | Shek et al. |
| 14–16 years Fish (2.29%) | Population-based (survey) | Connett et al. | |
| Singapore | 1. Bird's nest; seafood; egg/milk | Hospital database (anaphylaxis) | Goh D et al. |
| 2. Shellfish; molluscs; bird's nest | Outpatient allergy referrals in adults | Thong et al. | |
| 0–2 years 1. Egg; seafood; cow's milk; peanut 2–5 years 1. Peanut; treenuts; cow's milk; seafood; egg 5–10 years 1. Seafood; peanut; treenuts; cow's milk; egg 10–16 years 1. Seafood; peanut; treenuts; egg; cow's milk | Emergency Department Visits for anaphylaxis | Ganapathy et al. | |
| 0–18 years Shellfish; peanut; milk; fish; egg >18 years 1. Shellfish; peanut; egg | Emergency Department Visits for anaphylaxis | Goh SH et al. | |
| Peanut; egg; shellfish; bird's nest | Emergency Department Visits for anaphylaxis | Liew et al. | |
| <2 years (GUSTO) 1. Egg (0.7–1.8%); milk (0.1–0.4%); peanut (0.2–0.3%) 3–4 years 1. Shellfish (0.6–0.9%); peanut (0.1–0.2%) | Population-based (birth cohort study) | Tham et al. | |
| 4–6 years - Shellfish (1.19%); peanut (0.64%); tree nuts (0.28%) - 14–16 years - Shellfish (5.23%); peanut (0.47%); tree nuts (0.33%) | Population-based (survey) | Shek et al. | |
| 14–16 years - Fish (0.26%) | Population-based (survey | Connett et al. | |
| Sri Lanka | 0–18 years Shellfish; peanut; milk; fish; egg >18 years 2. Shellfish; peanut; egg | Emergency Department Visits for anaphylaxis | Goh SH et al. |
| Taiwan | Peanut; egg; shellfish; bird's nest | Emergency Department Visits for anaphylaxis | Liew et al. |
| Thailand | Challenge proven estimate: Shrimp (0.88%) Current Food Allergy (self-reported): shrimp; milk; egg Ever food allergy: milk; shrimp; egg | Population-based (survey) | Lao-Araya et al. |
| <5 years (self-reported) 1. Cow's milk; Egg >5 years - Shellfish | Population-based (survey) | Santadusit et al. | |
| <3 years – wheat >3 years – shellfish | Oral food challenges in an allergy clinic | Srisuwatchari et al. | |
| 1. Seafood; wheat; egg; milk | Anaphylaxis admissions at a tertiary hospital | Manuyakorn et al. | |
| 14–16 years - Fish (0.29%) | Population-based (survey) | Connett et al. | |
| Vietnam | Seafood (2.6%); beef (0.8%); milk (0.2–0.7%); egg (0.4%); peanut (0.1–0.3%); soy (0.2–0.3%); treenuts (0.2–0.3%) | Population-based (survey) in adults | Le et al. |
Figures in parentheses refer to population prevalence
Some published data on food allergens from. Latin America
| Country (Alphabet) | Allergens reported | Study Design | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | Cow milk | Preschoolers (52.8%) Infants (42.7%) Self report | Guimarães et al. |
| Fish (29.5% vs. 11.3%), egg (24.4% vs. 4.8%), cow milk (23.1% vs. 3.2%), wheat (20% vs. 8.1%), peanut (14% vs. 4.8%), soybean (11.8% vs. 4.8%), corn (10.6% vs. 4.8%) in patients versus control group Sensitization to milk was prevalent in children below 2 years. | 457 allergic and 62 healthy children Specific IgE sensitization | Naspitz et al. | |
| Chile | Cow milk | Children 8 months–15 years evaluated by SPT for 14 foods. | Martinez et al. |
| Peanuts, Walnuts | Parent reported cross sectional survey of 488 parents of school age children | Hoyos-Bachiloglu et al. | |
| Colombia | Fruits (14.9%), vegetables (41.8%), seafood (26.6%), meats (20.8%) | Cross-sectional study on children and adults from Cartagena Self report | Marrugo et al. |
| Guava, papaya, banana, passion fruit, mango, tomato, corn, yellow potato, soybean, cassava 47 (23%) children with sensitization to one food including corn (12%), banana (10%), guava (4%), yellow potato (2%), mango (1%) | 160 children under 2 years from Bogota Specific IgE (Immundot) | Leal et al. | |
| Costa Rica | Sensitization in the asthmatic group: Fish (60%), mixed vegetable (58%), almond (54%), garlic (53%), yeast (51%), wheat (50%), soybean (48%), egg (48%), milk (43%), peanut (42%), corn (40%), onion (38%), orange (28%), cereal mixture (15%) In the non-asthmatic group sensitization rate was very similar to the asthmatic group, being significantly lower for wheat and eggs, but higher for peanuts (48%) and soybean (51%). | 183 asthmatic and 275 healthy children from 98 schools Specific IgE for 15 food items | Soto-Quiros et al. |
| Honduras | Milk (9.0%), egg (6.9%), peanuts (4.9%), pork (4.4%) 58.3% were poly-sensitized | 365 children, 1–18 years old (average 9.8 years) SPT | Gonzales-González et al. |
| Mexico | Fish (12%), cow milk (7.7%), seafood (6.5%), soybean (4.3%), beans (4.3%), orange (4.1%), onion (3.7%), tomato (3.6%), nuts (3.5%), chicken (3.5%), lettuce (2.7%), strawberry (2.0%) 442 (31%) had sensitization to one or more foods; most affected children 4–7 years old (49%); Children less than 3 years old (24%) | 1,419 patients from Mexico City. SPT | Avila Castañon et al. |
| Shrimp (1.3%), other shellfish (0.7%), strawberries (0.6%), chocolate (0.5%), egg (0.4%) | Children 5–13 years old from Culiacán Parent-reported questionnaire | Ontiveros et al. | |
| Venezuela | Cow's milk: 45 patients of AD (80%) | 56 patient with atopic dermatitis (AD) and 53 healthy children SPT to multiple food allergens | Navarro D et al. |
| Oral mites: pancakes, sponge cake, pizza, pasta, stake parmigiana, corn cake (mixed corn and wheat flour), wheat bread, Tequeños (wheat flour and cheese appetizer), Alfajor (wheat and milk sweet), and white sauce | Both in vitro and in vivo specific IgE testing performed | Sánchez-Borges et al. |
SPT: skin prick test