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- Title
Homemade Food Allergen Extracts for Use in Skin Prick Tests in the Diagnosis of IgE-Mediated Food Allergy: A Good Alternative in the Absence of Commercially Available Extracts?
- Authors
Terlouw, Severina; van Boven, Frank E.; Borsboom-van Zonneveld, Monika; de Graaf-in 't Veld, Catharina; van Splunter, Marloes E.; van Daele, Paul L. A.; van Maaren, Maurits S.; Schreurs, Marco W. J.; de Jong, Nicolette W.
- Abstract
Introduction: The skin prick test (SPT) is the first step in the diagnosis of an immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated food allergy. The availability of commercial food allergen extracts is very limited, resulting in a need for alternative extraction methods of food allergens. The objective of this study was to compare the SPT results of homemade food allergen extracts with commercially available extracts. Methods: Adult patients with a suspected food allergy were included. Food allergen-specific symptoms were scored using a questionnaire. SPTs were performed with homemade and commercially available extracts (ALK-Abelló, Kopenhagen, Denmark) from almond, apple, hazelnut, peach, peanut, and walnut. Serum-specific IgE was measured with ISAC or ImmunoCAP™. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) between the SPT results of both extract methods were calculated. The proportion of agreement with food allergen-specific symptoms was analyzed. Results: Fifty-four patients (mean age 36; range 19–69 years; female/male: 42/12) were included. The intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) between the SPT results of both extract methods were strong for hazelnut 0.79 (n = 44) and walnut 0.78 (n = 31), moderate for apple 0.74 (n = 21) and peanut 0.66 (n = 28), and weak for almond 0.36 (n = 27) and peach 0.17 (n = 23). The proportion of agreement between SPT results and food allergen-specific symptoms was comparable for homemade and commercially available extracts, except for peach; 0.77 versus 0.36, respectively. Conclusion: In the diagnostic procedures to identify an IgE-mediated food allergy, homemade extracts from hazelnut and walnut appear to be a good alternative in the absence of commercially available food allergen extracts.
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of food allergies; HOME environment; SKIN tests; IMMUNOGLOBULINS; APPLES; WALNUT; COMPARATIVE studies; FOOD; INTRACLASS correlation; QUESTIONNAIRES; PEANUTS; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; PLANT extracts; SENSITIVITY &; specificity (Statistics); ALMOND; ALLERGENS; FOOD allergy; NUTS; PEACH; EVALUATION
- Publication
Nutrients, 2022, Vol 14, Issue 3, p475
- ISSN
2072-6643
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/nu14030475