| Literature DB >> 35010894 |
Gavriela Feketea1,2,3, Emilia Vassilopoulou4, Foteini Geropanta5, Elena Camelia Berghea6,7, Ioana Corina Bocsan8.
Abstract
In the Mediterranean region, fish is a common cause of food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES) in children. No laboratory tests specific to FPIES are available, and oral food challenge (OFC) is the gold standard for its diagnosis and testing for achievement of tolerance. Children with FPIES to fish are usually advised to avoid all fish, regardless of the species. Fish are typically classified into bony and cartilaginous, which are phylogenetically distant species and therefore contain less cross-reacting allergens. The protein β-parvalbumin, considered a pan-allergenic, is found in bony fish, while the non-allergenic α-parvalbumin is commonly found in cartilaginous fish. Based on this difference, as a first step in the therapeutic process of children with FPIES caused by a certain fish in the bony fish category (i.e., hake, cod, perch, sardine, gilthead sea bream, red mullet, sole, megrim, sea bass, anchovy, tuna, swordfish, trout, etc.), an OFC to an alternative from the category of cartilaginous fish is suggested (i.e., blue shark, tope shark, dogfish, monkfish, skate, and ray) and vice versa. Regarding the increased mercury content in some sharks and other large species, the maximum limit imposed by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) for weekly mercury intake must be considered. An algorithm for the management of fish-FPIES, including alternative fish species, is proposed.Entities:
Keywords: bony fish; cartilaginous fish; fish; food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35010894 PMCID: PMC8746553 DOI: 10.3390/nu14010019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Fish species implicated in the presentation of FPIES in children.
| Fish Species | Number of Cases (%) | Tolerance to Other Species | Country, City | Publication |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| hake, whiting, sole, perch, anchovy, monkfish | 16 | Unspecified | Spain, Alicante | [ |
| hake | 3 (37.5%) | Unspecified | Spain, Madrid | [ |
| hake, sole, megrim, cod, canned tuna, sardine, swordfish | 80 | canned tuna and swordfish | Spain, Madrid | [ |
| cod, perch, sardine, tope, sea bream | 56 (56%) | 5 subjects tolerated a type of fish other than the culprit species | Greece, Athens | [ |
| cod, tope shark, tuna | 25 (34.7%) | Unspecified | Greece, Athens | [ |
| unspecified | 42 (53.8%) | Unspecified | Greece, multicenter | [ |
| unspecified fish, white fish, tuna, salmon | 12 (5%) | Unspecified | Australia (multicenter) | [ |
| hake (14) monkfish (6), sole and megrim (4) | 17 (80%) | Unspecified | Spain, La Coruna | [ |
| hake, sole, cork float | 14 | Unspecified | Spain, Madrid | [ |
| sole, cod, sea bass, gilthead, anchovy | 70 | cod, salmon, swordfish, bass, red mullet, anchovy, canned tuna, gilthead, trout | Italy, multicenter | [ |
| hake (19), sole (9), monkfish (7), canned tuna (4), salmon (2), swordfish (1), fresh tuna (1), dogfish (1) | 44 (54.3%) | Other fish species were not tested. | Spain, Barcelona | [ |
| unspecified fish | 5 (3.12%) | US, New York | [ | |
| cod, sole, sea bream, salmon, trout | 8 (12%) | three were tolerant to different fish types (salmon + swordfish, cod + tuna, sea bream + cod + perch) | Italy multicenter | [ |
| unspecified | 102 (57%) | 41% reacted to more than one fish species and 78/102 (76%) were avoiding all fish. | Spain, Italy, 12 centers | [ |
| unspecified | 28 (25%) | Unspecified | Sweden, multicenter | [ |
| unspecified | 19 (14%) | Unspecified | UK and Ireland | [ |
| unspecified | 39 (32.5%) | Unspecified | Spain, multicenter | [ |
| unspecified | 19 (11%) | Unspecified | Australia | [ |
Figure 1Algorithm for the management of food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES) caused by fish. * bony fishes: cod (Gadus morhua), hake (Merluccius merluccius), perch (Perca fluviatilis), sardine (Sardina pilchardus), gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata), red mullet (Mullus barbatus, Chelon labrosus), sole (Solea solea), megrim (Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis), sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax), anchovy (Anchoa), tuna (Thunnus), swordfish (Xiphias gladius), trout (Salmo trutta); ** cartilaginous fishes: blue shark (Prionace glauca), dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicular), monkfish (angelshark—Squatina squatina), skates and rays (Raja), tope shark (Galeorhinus galeus) (Information on fish species identification from www.fishbase.org (accessed on 1 November 2021) [28]).