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The role of short-term grass pollen exposure in food skin-prick test reactivity, food allergy, and eczema flares in children

Authors :
Nur Sabrina Idrose
Caroline J. Lodge
Rachel L. Peters
Jo A. Douglass
Jennifer J. Koplin
Adrian J. Lowe
Kirsten P. Perrett
Mimi L. K. Tang
Ed J. Newbigin
Michael J. Abramson
Bircan Erbas
Don Vicendese
Shyamali C. Dharmage
Source :
Pediatric allergy and immunology : official publication of the European Society of Pediatric Allergy and ImmunologyREFERENCES. 33(10)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

While the relationship between pollen and respiratory allergies is well-documented, the role of short-term pollen exposure in food allergy and eczema flares has not previously been explored. We aimed to investigate these associations in a population-based sample of children.We investigated 1- (n = 1108) and 6-year-old (n = 675) children in the grass pollen season from the HealthNuts cohort. Grass pollen concentrations were considered on the day of testing (lag 0), up to three days before (lag 1-lag 3) and cumulatively (lag 0-3). Associations between grass pollen and food skin-prick test reactivity (SPT ≥ 2 mm at age 1 year and ≥ 3 mm at age 6 years), eczema flares, challenge-confirmed food allergy, reaction threshold to oral food challenges (OFC), and serum food-specific IgE levels were analyzed using either logistic or quantile regression models. Atopy and family history of allergic disease were considered as potent effect modifiers.Grass pollen at lag 0-3 (every 20 grains/msup3/supincrease) was associated with an up to 1.2-fold increased odds of food SPT reactivity and eczema flares in 6-year-olds. In 1-year-olds, the associations were only observed for peanut in those with a family history of food allergy. Increasing grass pollen concentrations were associated with a lower reaction threshold to OFC and higher serum IgE levels in peanut-allergic 1-year-olds only.Increasing grass pollen concentration was associated with increased risk of food SPT reactivity and eczema flares in children. The associations in peanut-allergic infants may be related to immune activation and/or peanut and grass pollen cross-reactivity leading to a lower reaction threshold.

Details

ISSN :
13993038
Volume :
33
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric allergy and immunology : official publication of the European Society of Pediatric Allergy and ImmunologyREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bbcd220a9f64d7ea018c4217492d38d2