Prevalence and characteristics of peanut allergy in US adults
- PMID: 33579526
- PMCID: PMC12341317
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.11.046
Prevalence and characteristics of peanut allergy in US adults
Abstract
Background: Peanut allergy (PA) is the leading pediatric food allergy and a common cause of anaphylaxis. Little is known, however, on the prevalence and characteristics of PA in the adult population and whether phenotypic differences exist between adult-onset and childhood-onset PA.
Objectives: This study describes the current US population-level burden of adult PA.
Methods: A cross-sectional food allergy survey was administered via phone and web in 2015 and 2016, resulting in nationally representative complex-survey weighted data for 40,443 adults. Reported food allergies were considered "convincing" if symptoms to specific allergens were consistent with an IgE-mediated reaction.
Results: The prevalence of current self-reported PA was 2.9% among US adults, with 1.8% having convincing PA. Over 17% of adults with peanut allergy reported onset of their PA in adulthood. In adults with childhood-onset PA, 75.4% reported physician-diagnosed PA, compared with only 58.9% of adult-onset PA. Despite a similar frequency of food allergy-related emergency department visits within the past year (approximately 1 in 5 adults with PA allergy), adults with childhood-onset PA were significantly more likely to have a current epinephrine prescription compared with those with adult-onset PA (56% vs 44% respectively; P = .02) and were more likely to use an epinephrine autoinjector (48% vs 35%, P = .01).
Conclusions: Approximately 4.6 million US adults have PA-over 800,000 of whom appear to have developed their PA after age 18 years. Further examination of phenotypic differences between childhood-onset and adult-onset PA may improve understanding and management of adult PA.
Keywords: Food allergy; adult-onset food allergy; atopy; peanut allergy; prevalence.
Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.
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Comment in
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Adult peanut allergy: What we know and what we need to learn.J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2021 Jun;147(6):2069-2072. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2021.03.031. Epub 2021 Apr 5. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2021. PMID: 33831418 No abstract available.
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