23 results on '"Blom, W.M."'
Search Results
2. Approaches to assess IgE mediated allergy risks (sensitization and cross-reactivity) from new or modified dietary proteins
- Author
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Remington, B., Broekman, H.C.H., Blom, W.M., Capt, A., Crevel, R.W.R., Dimitrov, I., Faeste, C.K., Fernandez-Canton, R., Giavi, S., Houben, G.F., Glenn, K.C., Madsen, C.B., Kruizinga, A.K., and Constable, A.
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- 2018
- Full Text
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3. Updated population minimal eliciting dose distributions for use in risk assessment of 14 priority food allergens
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Remington, B.C., Westerhout, J., Meima, M.Y., Blom, W.M., Kruizinga, A.G., Wheeler, M.W., Taylor, S.L., Houben, G.F., and Baumert, J.L.
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FoodLabeling ,Minimal eliciting dose distribution ,Mustard ,Walnut ,Threshold ,Analytical parameters ,Celery ,Allergic reaction ,Shrimp ,Milk ,Peanut ,Cashew nut ,Trend study ,Wheat ,Lupin ,Egg ,Soy food ,Prediction ,Fish meal ,Hazelnut ,Model averaging ,Risk assessment ,Sesame - Abstract
Food allergy and allergen management are important global public health issues. In 2011, the first iteration of our allergen threshold database (ATDB) was established based on individual NOAELs and LOAELs from oral food challenge in roughly 1750 allergic individuals. Population minimal eliciting dose (EDp) distributions based on this dataset were published for 11 allergenic foods in 2014. Systematic data collection has continued (2011–2018) and the dataset now contains over 3400 data points. The current study provides new and updated EDp values for 14 allergenic foods and incorporates a newly developed Stacked Model Averaging statistical method for interval-censored data. ED01 and ED05 values, the doses at which 1%, and respectively 5%, of the respective allergic population would be predicted to experience any objective allergic reaction were determined. The 14 allergenic foods were cashew, celery, egg, fish, hazelnut, lupine, milk, mustard, peanut, sesame, shrimp (for crustacean shellfish), soy, walnut, and wheat. Updated ED01 estimates ranged between 0.03 mg for walnut protein and 26.2 mg for shrimp protein. ED05 estimates ranged between 0.4 mg for mustard protein and 280 mg for shrimp protein. The ED01 and ED05 values presented here are valuable in the risk assessment and subsequent risk management of allergenic foods. © 2020
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- 2020
4. Sensitivity analysis to derive a food consumption point estimate for deterministic food allergy risk assessment
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Blom, W.M., Remington, B.C., Baumert, J.L., Bucchini, L., Crépet, A., Crevel, R.W.R., Madsen, C.B., Taylor, S.L., Houben, G.F., and Kruizinga, A.G.
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Allergen management ,Reference amount ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Food allergy ,Food consumption percentile ,Deterministic risk assessment ,Probabilistic risk assessment - Abstract
One of the input parameters in food allergy risk assessment is the amount of a given food consumed at an eating occasion. There is no consensus on how to use food consumption data when assessing the risk from unintended allergen presence in food products. A sensitivity analysis was performed to establish the optimal food consumption estimate for a deterministic food allergy risk assessment. Exposure was calculated for consumption percentiles (50th percentile, P50 to maximum) using the iFAAM consumption database in conjunction with an allergen concentration range from 1 to 1000 ppm. The resulting allergen intakes were compared to the allergic population reference doses proposed by Taylor et al. (2014) for 10 major allergenic foods. Optimal consumption percentiles were defined as those which predicted an intake below the relevant reference dose and met the defined acceptable risk level confirmed by probabilistic risk assessments. Analysis showed that, for 99% of the food groups, the P50 consumption met our criteria, while the P75 did so for 100% of the food groups. We suggest that the P75 is the optimal point estimate for use in deterministic food allergy risk assessment. It meets the safety objective and is adequately conservative for a public health context.
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- 2019
5. Evidence-based approaches to the application of precautionary allergen labelling: Report from two iFAAM workshops
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DunnGalvin, A., Roberts, G., Schnadt, S., Astley, S., Austin, M., Blom, W.M., Baumert, J., Chan, C.H., Crevel, R.W.R., Grimshaw, K.E.C., Kruizinga, A.G., Regent, L., Taylor, S., Walker, M., and Mills, E.N.C.
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Precautionary labelling ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Food allergy ,May contain ,humanities ,Analysis ,Risk assessment - Abstract
Food allergy is a major public health concern with avoidance of the trigger food(s) being central to management by the patient. Food information legislation mandates the declaration of allergenic ingredients; however, the labelling of the unintentional presence of allergens is less defined. Precautionary allergen labelling (PAL) was introduced by the food industry to help manage and communicate the risk of reaction from the unintended presence of allergens in foods. In its current form, PAL is counterproductive for consumers with food allergies as there is no standardized approach to applying PAL. Foods with a PAL often do not contain the identified food allergen while some products without a PAL contain quantities of common food allergens that are capable of inducing an allergic reaction. Integrated Approaches to Food Allergen and Allergy Risk Management (iFAAM) was an EU-funded project that aimed to improve the management of food allergens by the food industry for the benefit of people with food allergies. Within iFAAM, a clinically validated tiered risk assessment approach for food allergens was developed. Two cross-stakeholder iFAAM workshops were held on 13-14 December 2016 and 19-20 April 2018. One of the objectives of these workshops was to develop a proposal to make PAL effective for consumers. This paper describes the outcomes from these workshops. This provides the basis for the development of more informative and transparent labelling that will ultimately improve management and well-being in consumers with food allergy. © 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
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- 2019
6. Deriving individual threshold doses from clinical food challenge data for population risk assessment of food allergens
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Westerhout, J., Baumert, J.L., Blom, W.M., Allen, K.J., Ballmer-Weber, B., Crevel, R.W.R., Dubois, A.E.J., Fernández-Rivas, M., Greenhawt, M.J., Hourihane, J.O., Koplin, J.J., Kruizinga, A.G., Le, T.M., Sampson, H.A., Shreffler, W.G., Turner, P.J., Taylor, S.L., Houben, G.F., and Remington, B.C.
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No observed adverse effect level–lowest observed adverse effect level derivation ,Double-blind, placebo-controlled food challengeeliciting dose ,Risk management ,Threshold ,Food allergy ,Food challenge ,Decision-making process ,Risk assessment - Abstract
Background: Food allergies are a significant public health issue, and the only effective management option currently available is strict avoidance of all foods containing the allergen. In view of the practical impossibility of limiting risks to zero, quantitative allergen risk assessment and management strategies are needed. Objective: We sought to develop appropriate methods for informing population-based risk assessments and risk management programs to benefit all stakeholders but particularly patients with food allergy. Methods: Individual thresholds for food allergens (maximum tolerable doses and minimum eliciting doses) can ideally be established through double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenges. If double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge data are not available, data from widely used open food challenges using predefined objective criteria can also provide useful data regarding minimum eliciting doses. For more than 20 years, the Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research and the Food Allergy Research and Resource Program at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln have been collecting individual maximum tolerable doses and minimum eliciting doses that produce objective symptoms from published and unpublished clinical data to better refine knowledge regarding the sensitivity of the population to food allergens. Results: In this article we provide in-depth insights into the methodology applied by the Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research and Food Allergy Research and Resource Program to derive individual maximum tolerable doses and minimum eliciting doses for objective symptoms from clinical food challenge data. More than 90 examples for determining individual allergic thresholds are presented. Conclusion: With the methodology presented in this article, we aim to stimulate harmonization and transparency in quantitative food allergen risk assessment and risk management programs, encouraging their wider adoption. © 2019 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
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- 2019
7. A subset of walnut allergic adults is sensitized to walnut 11S globulin Jug r 4
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Blankestijn, M.A., Hartog Jager, C.F. den, Blom, W.M., Otten, H.G., Jong, G.A.H. de, Gaspari, M., Houben, G.F., Knulst, A.C., and Verhoeckx, K.C.M.
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immunoblot ,Jug r 4 ,double blind placebo controlled food challenge ,walnut allergy ,11s globulin ,Nutrition - Abstract
Background: The role of sensitization to commercially available allergens of English walnut (Juglans regia) Jug r 1, 2 and 3 in walnut allergy has been previously investigated in walnut allergic adults and was unable to explain all cases of walnut allergy. Objectives: Identify recognized walnut allergens, other than the ones previously investigated (Jug r 1-3), in walnut allergic adults and determine the sensitization frequency and diagnostic value. Methods: Three different in-house walnut extracts were prepared and analysed on SDS-PAGE blots to identify allergenic walnut proteins. Immunoblots and immunoprecipitation, followed by LC-MS analysis, were performed to screen for, and confirm, IgE binding to walnut allergens in selected walnut allergic adults. In a cohort of 55 walnut challenged adults, including 33 allergic and 22 tolerant, sensitization to native and recombinant walnut allergen Jug r 4 was assessed using immunoblotting and immuno-line blot (EUROLINE), respectively. Results: Screening of sera of 8 walnut allergic adults identified Jug r 4 as an allergen in our population. In the total cohort of 55 subjects, 5 were positive for Jug r 4 on immunoblot and 10 on EUROLINE. All but one EUROLINE positive subject had a positive food challenge (sensitivity 27%, specificity 95%, PPV 90%, NPV 47%). All 5 subjects positive on immunoblot were also positive on EUROLINE. LC-MS analysis showed a lack of Jug r 4 in the ImmunoCAP extract. Co-sensitization to other 11S albumins (eg hazelnut Cor a 9) was common in Jug r 4 sensitized subjects, potentially due to cross-reactivity. Conclusions: Walnut 11S globulin Jug r 4 is a relevant minor allergen, recognized by 27% of walnut allergic adults. It has a high positive predictive value of 90% for walnut allergy. Specific IgE against Jug r 4 occurred mostly with concomitant sensitization to other walnut components, mainly Jug r 1. © 2018 The Authors. Clinical & Experimental Allergy Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
- Published
- 2018
8. Accidental food allergy reactions: Products and undeclared ingredients
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Blom, W.M., Michelsen-Huisman, A.D., Os-Medendorp, H. van, Duijn, G. van, Zeeuw-Brouwer, M.L. de, Versluis, A., Castenmiller, J.J.M., Noteborn, H.P.J.M., Kruizinga, A.G., Knulst, A.C., and Houben, G.F.
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Allergen intake ,Food product ,Allergen management ,Reference dose ,Accidental allergic reaction ,Food allergy ,Undeclared allergen ,respiratory system ,Allergen labeling ,respiratory tract diseases ,Nutrition ,Precautionary allergen labeling - Abstract
Background: Accidental allergic reactions to food are frequent and can be severe and even fatal. Objective: We sought to analyze the culprit food products and levels of unexpected allergens in accidental reactions. Methods: A prospective cohort study was conducted in adults (n = 157) with a physician-confirmed diagnosis of food allergy. During a 1-year follow-up, 73 patients reported accidental allergic reactions and the culprit food products. Food samples received (n = 51) were analyzed for a wide range of suspected noningredient allergens, and risk was quantified. Results: A very diverse range of food products was responsible for the unexpected allergic reactions. Thirty-seven percent (19/51) of products analyzed had 1 to 4 culprit allergens identified that were not supposed to be present according to the ingredient declaration. Concentrations varied from 1 to 5000 mg of protein of the allergenic food per kilogram of food product and were greatest for peanut, milk, and sesame. Milk proteins posed the highest estimated risk for objective allergic reactions. The intake of culprit allergens by patients varied considerably. For those cases in which culprit allergens were detected, the intake of at least 1 allergen exceeded the reference dose or a culprit allergen with a yet unknown reference dose was present. Both patient neglect of precautionary allergen labeling statements and omission of using a precautionary allergen labeling statement by food manufacturers seem to contribute to accidental reactions. Conclusion: A wide range of food products are causing accidental reactions in patients with food allergy. Eight different allergens not declared on the ingredient lists were detected in the culprit food products, all of which were representative of allergens regulated in the European Union. © 2018 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
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- 2018
9. Approaches to assess IgE mediated allergy risks (sensitization and cross-reactivity) from new or modified dietary proteins
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Remington, B. Broekman, H.C.H. Blom, W.M. Capt, A. Crevel, R.W.R. Dimitrov, I. Faeste, C.K. Fernandez-Canton, R. Giavi, S. Houben, G.F. Glenn, K.C. Madsen, C.B. Kruizinga, A.K. Constable, A.
- Abstract
The development and introduction of new dietary protein sources has the potential to improve food supply sustainability. Understanding the potential allergenicity of these new or modified proteins is crucial to ensure protection of public health. Exposure to new proteins may result in de novo sensitization, with or without clinical allergy, or clinical reactions through cross-reactivity. In this paper we review the potential of current methodologies (in silico, in vitro degradation, in vitro IgE binding, animal models and clinical studies) to address these outcomes for risk assessment purposes for new proteins, and especially to identify and characterise the risk of sensitization for IgE mediated allergy from oral exposure. Existing tools and tests are capable of assessing potential crossreactivity. However, there are few possibilities to assess the hazard due to de novo sensitization. The only methods available are in vivo models, but many limitations exist to use them for assessing risk. We conclude that there is a need to understand which criteria adequately define allergenicity for risk assessment purposes, and from these criteria develop a more suitable battery of tests to distinguish between proteins of high and low allergenicity, which can then be applied to assess new proteins with unknown risks. © 2017 The Authors
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- 2018
10. Assessing food allergy risks from residual peanut protein in highly refined vegetable oil
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Blom, W.M., Kruizinga, A.G., Rubingh, C.M., Remington, B.C., Crevel, R.W.R., and Houben, G.F.
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Life ,Food allergy ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,food and beverages ,Food and Nutrition ,Refined vegetable oils ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Allergen risk assessment ,Healthy Living ,Nutrition ,Precautionary allergen labeling ,Refined peanut oil ,Unintended peanut protein - Abstract
Refined vegetable oils including refined peanut oil are widely used in foods. Due to shared production processes, refined non-peanut vegetable oils can contain residual peanut proteins. We estimated the predicted number of allergic reactions to residual peanut proteins using probabilistic risk assessment applied to several scenarios involving food products made with vegetable oils. Variables considered were: a) the estimated production scale of refined peanut oil, b) estimated cross-contact between refined vegetable oils during production, c) the proportion of fat in representative food products and d) the peanut protein concentration in refined peanut oil. For all products examined the predicted risk of objective allergic reactions in peanut-allergic users of the food products was extremely low. The number of predicted reactions ranged depending on the model from a high of 3 per 1000 eating occasions (Weibull) to no reactions (LogNormal). Significantly, all reactions were predicted for allergen intakes well below the amounts reported for the most sensitive individual described in the clinical literature. We conclude that the health risk from cross-contact between vegetable oils and refined peanut oil is negligible. None of the food products would warrant precautionary labelling for peanut according to the VITAL® programme of the Allergen Bureau. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2017
11. Unintended allergens in precautionary labelled and unlabelled products pose significant risks to UK allergic consumers
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Remington, B.C., Baumert, J.L., Blom, W.M., Houben, G.F., Taylor, S.L., and Kruizinga, A.G.
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Quality of life ,Adult ,Male ,Peanut allergy ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Allergen risk assessment ,Food packaging ,Life ,immune system diseases ,Food allergy ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Milk allergy ,Food and Nutrition ,Cross-contact ,Child ,Biology ,Hazelnut ,Risk assessment ,Nut allergy ,respiratory system ,Consumer ,Precautionary allergen labelling ,Wheat allergy ,respiratory tract diseases ,Food allergen ,Female ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Healthy Living ,Human - Abstract
Background Allergens in food may pose a risk to allergic consumers. While there is EU regulation for allergens present as an ingredient, this is not the case for unintended allergen presence (UAP). Food companies use precautionary allergen labels to inform allergic individuals of a potential risk from UAPs. This study investigates the risk of an allergic reaction within the milk-, wheat-, hazelnut- and peanut-allergic populations when ingesting UK foods across multiple product categories with and without precautionary allergen labelling. Methods Allergen risk assessment using probabilistic techniques enables the estimation of the residual risk after the consumption of a product that unintentionally contains an allergen. Results Within this selection of UK products, the majority that tested positive for an allergen contained a concentration of allergen predicted to cause a reaction in >1% of the allergic population. The concentrations of allergens measured were greater than the VITAL® 2.0 action levels and would trigger precautionary allergen labelling. This was found for products both with and without precautionary allergen labelling. Conclusions The results highlight the need for the food industry and regulators to adopt a transparent, risk-based approach for the communication of the risk associated with potential cross-contact that could occur in the processing facility or production chain. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
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- 2015
12. Understanding food allergen thresholds requires careful analysis of the available clinical data
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Taylor, S.L., Houben, G.F., Baumert, J.L., Crevel, R.R.W.R., Allen, K.J., Dubois, A.E.J., Knulst, A.C., Remington, B.C., Kruizinga, A.G., Blom, W.M., and Brooke-Taylor, S.
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Public health ,Egg allergy ,Food processing ,Letter ,Peanut allergy ,Allergic reaction ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Hazelnut allergy ,Peanut ,Patient selection ,Life ,Health ,Allergenicity ,Geographic origin ,Food allergy ,Milk allergy ,Immunotherapy ,Statistical model ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Healthy for Life ,Healthy Living ,Human ,Priority journal - Published
- 2015
13. Actiegrenswaarden voor may contain-vermelding [Action levels for 'may contain' labelling]
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Blom, W.M., Knulst, A., and Houben, G.F.
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Practice guideline ,Population ,Food contamination ,RAPID - Risk Assessment Products in Development ,Dietitian ,Food safety ,Health hazard ,Cross contact ,Food packaging ,Life ,Labelling ,Food allergy ,Food and Nutrition ,May contain ,Nutrition ,Reference dose ,Allergens ,Consumer ,Action levels ,Food products ,Physician ,Food allergen ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Healthy Living ,Human - Abstract
Patiënten met een voedselallergie hebben gemiddeld één keer per jaar een onverwachte allergische ¡eactie. Een belangrijke bron van problemen is de onbedoelde aanwezigheid van allergenen in levensmiddelen als gevolg van kruiscontaminatie. De huidige wijze van waarschuwen, bijvoorbeeld door mededelingen als "Kan mogelijk sporen bevatten van ...", ook wel May Contain-vermelding genoemd, blijkt een slechte correlatie te vertonen met de aan- ofafwezigheid van een voedselallergeen door kmiscontaminatie. Daardoor nemen allergische patiënten de waarschuwingen niet altijd meer serieus met alle risico's van dien. In internationaal verband wordt daarom gewerkt aan het ontwikkelen van een nieuwe richtlijn voor de møy contøin-vermelding op het etiket op basis van wetenschappelijk gefundeerde actiegrenswaarden. DiI zal leiden tot uitbreiding van de productkeuze voor allergische patiënten. Het is belangrijk dat artsen en diëtisten op de hoogte zljnvan deze ontwikkelingen, zodarzij te zijner tijd de adviezen kunnen eanpassen aan de nieuwe situatie.
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- 2014
14. Food allergy population thresholds: An evaluation of the number of oral food challenges and dosing schemes on the accuracy of threshold dose distribution modeling
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Klein Entink, R.H., Remington, B.C., Blom, W.M., Rubingh, C.M., Kruizinga, A.G., Baumert, J.L., Taylor, S.L., and Houben, G.F.
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Simulation study ,food allergy ,accuracy ,statistical model ,RAPID - Risk Assessment Products in Development ,sample size ,nutritional parameters ,statistical distribution ,threshold dose distribution ,Life ,provocation test ,Food and Nutrition ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Healthy Living ,Allergenic foods ,Nutrition ,food allergen - Abstract
For most allergenic foods, limited availability of threshold dose information within the population restricts the advice on action levels of unintended allergenic foods which should trigger advisory labeling on packaged foods.The objective of this paper is to provide guidance for selecting an optimal sample size for threshold dosing studies for major allergenic foods and to identify factors influencing the accuracy of estimation. A simulation study was performed to evaluate the effects of sample size and dosing schemes on the accuracy of the threshold distribution curve. The relationships between sample size, dosing scheme and the employed statistical distribution on the one hand and accuracy of estimation on the other hand were obtained. It showed that the largest relative gains in accuracy are obtained when sample size increases from N= 20 to N= 60. Moreover, it showed that the EuroPrevall dosing scheme is a useful start, but that it may need revision for a specific allergen as more data become available, because a proper allocation of the dosing steps is important.The results may guide risk assessors in minimum sample sizes for new studies and in the allocation of proper dosing schemes for allergens in provocation studies. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
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- 2014
15. Actiegrenswaarden voor een mogelijke kruisbesmetting van een levensmiddel met allergenen
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Blom, W.M. and Houben, G.F.
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Reference dose ,Allergenen ,Referentiedosering ,Clinical thresholds ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Action limits ,Cross contamination ,Allergens ,Kruiscontaminatie ,Life ,Actiegrenswaarden ,‘May contain’ labelling ,Food and Nutrition ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Healthy Living ,Klinische drempelwaarden ,Nutrition ,‘May contain’-etikettering - Abstract
De onbedoelde aanwezigheid van allergenen in levensmiddelen als gevolg van kruiscontaminatie is een probleem voor voedselallergische patiënten en levensmiddelenproducenten. Het etiketteren van producten met een zogeheten ‘kan mogelijk sporen bevatten van …’ (‘may contain’)-etikettering blijkt een slechte correlatie te vertonen met de aan- of afwezigheid van een voedselallergeen door kruiscontaminatie. Dit heeft geleid tot een verminderde waarde van de waarschuwing voor allergische patiënten met mogelijke gezondheidsrisico’s. In internationaal verband wordt daarom gewerkt aan het ontwikkelen van een kwantitatieve richtlijn voor de ‘may contain’-vermelding op basis van wetenschappelijk gefundeerde actiegrenswaarden. Een herziening van de huidige ‘may contain’-vermelding betekent een verbetering van de productkeuze voor allergische patiënten en een betere basis voor de advisering door artsen en diëtisten.
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- 2013
16. Threshold dose distributions for 5 major allergenic foods in children
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Blom, W.M., Vlieg-Boerstra, B.J., Kruizinga, A.G., Heide, S. van der, Houben, G.F., and Dubois, A.E.J.
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Life ,Health ,Threshold dose distributions ,Healthy for Life ,QS - Quality & Safety ,EELS - Earth, Environmental and Life Sciences ,Children ,Eliciting dose ,Healthy Living ,Allergenic foods - Abstract
Background: For most allergenic foods, insufficient threshold dose information within the population restricts the advice on levels of unintended allergenic foods which should trigger precautionary labeling on prepackaged foods. Objective: We wanted to derive threshold dose distributions for major allergenic foods and to elaborate the protein doses at which a proportion of the allergic population is likely to respond. Methods: For 7 allergenic foods double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenges (DBPCFCs) with a positive outcome for allergic reactions were selected from the clinical database of children routinely tested to diagnose food allergy at the University Medical Center Groningen. For each allergen 2 population threshold distributions were determined with the individual minimal eliciting dose and the preceding dose of each DBPCFC for objective symptoms and any symptom (either subjective or objective). Results: Individual positive DBPCFCs were available for peanut (n = 135), cow's milk (n = 93), hen's egg (n = 53), hazelnut (n = 28), and cashew nut (n = 31). Fewer children were challenged with soy (n = 10) or walnut (n = 13). Threshold dose distributions showed a good statistical and visual fit. The protein dose at which 5% of the allergic population is likely to respond with objective reactions was 1.6 mg for peanut, 1.1 mg for cow's milk, 1.5 mg for hen's egg, 7.4 mg for cashew nut, and 0.29 mg for hazelnut. Thresholds for any symptom were on average 2 to 6 times lower than for objective symptoms. The 95% upper and lower confidence intervals of the threshold distributions were overlapping. The peanut threshold distribution on objective symptoms was similar to the distribution of another European center. Conclusions: Threshold distribution curves and eliciting doses are a powerful tool to compare different allergenic foods and for informing policy on precautionary labeling. © 2012 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology.
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- 2013
17. The scaling of allergenic products for the hazard characterisation of new products
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Kruizinga, A.G., Klein Entink, R.H., Blom, W.M., Houben, G.F., and Bilsen, J.H.M. van
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Life ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Food and Nutrition ,ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences ,Healthy Living ,Nutrition - Published
- 2013
18. Objective eliciting doses of peanut-allergic adults and children can be combined for risk assessment purposes
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Klemans, R.J.B., Blom, W.M., Erp, F.C. van, Masthoff, L.J.N., Rubingh, C.M., Ent, C.K. van der, Bruijnzeel-Koomen, C.A.F.M., Houben, G.F., Pasmans, S.G.M.A., Meijer, Y., Knulst, A.C., Klemans, R.J.B., Blom, W.M., Erp, F.C. van, Masthoff, L.J.N., Rubingh, C.M., Ent, C.K. van der, Bruijnzeel-Koomen, C.A.F.M., Houben, G.F., Pasmans, S.G.M.A., Meijer, Y., and Knulst, A.C.
- Abstract
Background: To improve food labelling strategies, information regarding eliciting doses (EDs) and the effect of patient characteristics on these EDs is necessary. Objective: To establish EDs for objective and subjective symptoms and analyse the effect of sensitization levels and other patient characteristics on threshold distribution curves (TDCs). Methods: Threshold data from 100 adults and 262 children with a positive food challenge were analysed with interval-censoring survival analysis (ICSA) and fitted to a TDC from which EDs could be extracted. Possible influencing factors were analysed as covariates by ICSA. A hazard ratio (HR) was calculated in case of a significant effect. Results: TDCs for both objective and subjective symptoms were significantly different between adults and children (P < 0.001). Objective ED05 values, however, were comparable (2.86 mg peanut protein in adults and 6.38 mg in children). Higher levels of sIgE to Ara h 2 and peanut extract were associated with a larger proportion of patient groups reacting to a dose increase with objective symptoms (adults and children) or subjective symptoms (adults, in children a trend). Age had a similar effect in children (HR 1.05 for objective symptoms and 1.09 for subjective symptoms). Gender had no effect on TDCs. Conclusion and Clinical Relevance: Subjective and objective TDCs were different between adults and children, but objective ED05 values were comparable, meaning that threshold data from children and adults can be combined for elaboration of reference doses for risk assessment. Higher sIgE levels to Ara h 2 and peanut extract were associated with a larger proportion of both patient groups to react to a certain dose increase. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
- Published
- 2015
19. Food allergy in children: threshold distribution curves for 6 major food allergens
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Blom, W.M., Vlieg-Boerstra, B.J., Spanjersberg, M.I.Q., Kruizinga, A.G., Heide, S., van der, Dubois, A.E.J., Houben, G.F., and TNO Kwaliteit van Leven
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Life ,Food and Nutrition ,QS - Quality & Safety ,EELS - Earth, Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,Nutrition Health - Published
- 2010
20. Double-blind placebo-controlled food challenges in children with alleged cow's milk allergy: prevention of unnecessary elimination diets and determination of eliciting doses.
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Dambacher, W.M., Kort, E.H.M., Blom, W.M., Houben, G.F., Vries, E. de, Dambacher, W.M., Kort, E.H.M., Blom, W.M., Houben, G.F., and Vries, E. de
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Contains fulltext : 118318.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), BACKGROUND: Children with cow's milk allergy (CMA) need a cow's milk protein (CMP) free diet to prevent allergic reactions. For this, reliable allergy-information on the label of food products is essential to avoid products containing the allergen. On the other hand, both overzealous labeling and misdiagnosis that result in unnecessary elimination diets, can lead to potentially hazardous health situations. Our objective was to evaluate if excluding CMA by double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge (DBPCFC) prevents unnecessary elimination diets in the long term. Secondly, to determine the minimum eliciting dose (MED) for an acute allergic reaction to CMP in DBPCFC positive children. METHODS: All children with suspected CMA under our care (Oct'05 - Jun'09) were prospectively enrolled in a DBPCFC. Placebo and verum feedings were administered on two randomly assigned separate days. The MED was determined by noting the 'lowest observed adverse effect level' (LOAEL) in DBPCFC-positive children. Based on the outcomes of the DBPCFC a dietary advice was given. Parents were contacted by phone several months later about the diet of their child. RESULTS: 116 children were available for analysis. In 76 children CMA was rejected. In 60 of them CMP was successfully reintroduced, in 2 the parents refused introduction, in another 3 the parents stopped reintroduction. In 9 children CMA symptoms reappeared. In 40 children CMA was confirmed. Infants aged = 12 months in our study group have a higher cumulative distribution of MED than older children. CONCLUSIONS: Excluding CMA by DBPCFC successfully stopped unnecessary elimination diets in the long term in most children. The MEDs form potential useful information for offering dietary advice to patients and their caretakers.
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- 2013
21. The scaling of allergenic products for the hazard characterisation of new proteins
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Kruizinga, A.G., primary, Klein Entink, R.H., additional, Blom, W.M., additional, Houben, G.F., additional, and van Bilsen, J.H.M., additional
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- 2013
- Full Text
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22. THE EFFECT OF EXTRACELLULAR ATP ON THE ACTIN CYTOSKELETON OF HEPATOCYTES
- Author
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Meijerman, I., primary, Blom, W.M., additional, and Nagelkerke, J.F., additional
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Pest Control Products Fact Sheet: To assess the risks for the consumer: Updated version for ConsExpo 4
- Author
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Bremmer HJ, Blom WM, van Hoeven-Arentzen PH, Prud’homme de Lodder LCH, van Raaij MTM, Straetmans EHFM, van Veen MP, and van Engelen JGM
- Abstract
Exposure to compounds in consumer products can be assessed using the computer program ConsExpo (Consumer Exposure). Given the huge number of consumer products, it is not possible to calculate the exposure for each separate product, so a limited number of groups containing similar products are defined. The information for each group of products is described in a fact sheet. Paint, cosmetics, children’s toys and cleaning products are examples fact sheets which have been published already. This fact sheet covers the use of pest control products by consumers. In the factsheet eight product categories are described, including sprays, dusting powders, repellents, electrical evaporators and baits. To assess exposure of compounds in the pest control products default values for all eight product categories have been determined., (© RIVM 2006.)
- Published
- 2006
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