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Correlation Between Specific Immunoglobulin E Levels and the Severity of Reactions in Egg Allergic Patients

Authors :
Robbie D. Pesek
Tamara T. Perry
Source :
Pediatrics. 122:S190-S191
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2008.

Abstract

Benhamou AH, Zamora SA, Eigenmann PA. Pediatr Allergy Immunol. 2008;19(2):173–179 PURPOSE OF THE STUDY. To determine if specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibody titers to egg were predictive of the severity of reaction during a standardized food challenge. STUDY POPULATION. The study was a retrospective review of children who underwent oral food challenges to egg over a 2-year period. Median age of patients was 3.9 years (range: 16 months to 11.9 years). Children with high egg-specific IgE titers and those with a severe reaction METHODS. Children with immediate-type reactions were tested by open food challenge, and those with atopic dermatitis or equivocal reactions were tested by double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge. Graded challenges were performed with pasteurized raw egg, cooked egg, or egg hidden in a chocolate testing preparation. The challenge was terminated when the patient reached a total dose of 45 g of egg or if there was unambiguous clinical reactivity and reaction severity was graded. RESULTS. Of the 51 challenges performed during the study period, 35 (69%) were positive. Thirteen (37%) of the positive challenges were considered severe. An egg radioallergosorbent (RAST) assay result of ≥17.4 kU/L was associated with 95% probability of having a positive challenge; 8.2 kU/L was associated with a 90% probability. For all challenges, egg-specific IgE titers ranged from CONCLUSIONS. There is a correlation between median egg-specific IgE levels and the severity of reaction during oral food challenge to egg. These levels may be helpful in predicting a potential reaction to egg. REVIEWER COMMENTS. It is often assumed that reaction severity correlates with the food-specific IgE level, but most studies have refuted this notion. Here, a relationship was determined. However, it is difficult to assess the clinical utility of these results, because there was considerable overlap of the ranges of egg-specific IgE levels between groups. These findings may be more relevant to the controlled setting of a diagnostic food challenge rather than to the community setting in which a large or uncontrolled dose of egg might be ingested. In a real-life setting, a severe reaction may occur even with a low egg-specific IgE level, particularly if one considers patient-dependent factors such as concurrent diagnosis of asthma or personal history of a previous severe reaction.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a10a007d3d998c66c8420d229f546391