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. 2015 Apr;135(4):964-971.
doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2014.10.047. Epub 2015 Jan 12.

How much is too much? Threshold dose distributions for 5 food allergens

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How much is too much? Threshold dose distributions for 5 food allergens

Barbara K Ballmer-Weber et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2015 Apr.

Abstract

Background: Precautionary labeling is used to warn consumers of the presence of unintended allergens, but the lack of agreed allergen thresholds can result in confusion and risk taking by patients with food allergy. The lack of data on threshold doses below which subjects are unlikely to react is preventing the development of evidence-based allergen management strategies that are understood by clinician and patient alike.

Objective: We sought to define threshold dose distributions for 5 major allergenic foods in the European population.

Methods: Patients with food allergy were drawn from the EuroPrevall birth cohort, community surveys, and outpatient clinic studies and invited to undergo a food challenge. Low-dose, double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenges were undertaken with commercially available food ingredients (peanut, hazelnut, celery, fish, and shrimp) blinded into common matrices. Dose distributions were modeled by using interval-censoring survival analysis with 3 parametric approaches.

Results: Of the 5 foods used for challenge, 4 produced similar dose distributions, with estimated doses eliciting reactions in 10% of the allergic population (ED10), ranging from 1.6 to 10.1 mg of protein for hazelnut, peanut, and celery with overlapping 95% CIs. ED10 values for fish were somewhat higher (27.3 mg of protein), although the CIs were wide and overlapping between fish and plant foods. Shrimp provided radically different dose distributions, with an ED10 value of 2.5 g of protein.

Conclusion: This evidence base will contribute to the development of reference doses and action levels for allergens in foods below which only the most sensitive subjects might react.

Keywords: EuroPrevall; Food; allergy; celeriac; fish; hazelnut; peanut; shrimp; threshold.

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Comment in

  • How much is too much . . . And in what setting?
    Lieberman JA. Lieberman JA. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016 Mar;137(3):967. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2015.09.046. Epub 2015 Nov 24. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016. PMID: 26620590 No abstract available.
  • Reply.
    Mills EN, Beyer K, Fernandez-Rivas M, Crevel RW, Ballmer-Weber B. Mills EN, et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016 Mar;137(3):967-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2015.09.045. Epub 2015 Nov 24. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016. PMID: 26620592 No abstract available.

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