Nederlandse Organisatie voor Toegepast Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek (TNO), Zeist, The Netherlands.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2013 Jan;131(1):172-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2012.10.034. Epub 2012 Nov 27.
For most allergenic foods, insufficient threshold dose information within the population restricts the advice on levels of unintended allergenic foods which should trigger precautionary labeling on prepackaged foods.
We wanted to derive threshold dose distributions for major allergenic foods and to elaborate the protein doses at which a proportion of the allergic population is likely to respond.
For 7 allergenic foods double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenges (DBPCFCs) with a positive outcome for allergic reactions were selected from the clinical database of children routinely tested to diagnose food allergy at the University Medical Center Groningen. For each allergen 2 population threshold distributions were determined with the individual minimal eliciting dose and the preceding dose of each DBPCFC for objective symptoms and any symptom (either subjective or objective).
Individual positive DBPCFCs were available for peanut (n = 135), cow's milk (n = 93), hen's egg (n = 53), hazelnut (n = 28), and cashew nut (n = 31). Fewer children were challenged with soy (n = 10) or walnut (n = 13). Threshold dose distributions showed a good statistical and visual fit. The protein dose at which 5% of the allergic population is likely to respond with objective reactions was 1.6 mg for peanut, 1.1 mg for cow's milk, 1.5 mg for hen's egg, 7.4 mg for cashew nut, and 0.29 mg for hazelnut. Thresholds for any symptom were on average 2 to 6 times lower than for objective symptoms. The 95% upper and lower confidence intervals of the threshold distributions were overlapping. The peanut threshold distribution on objective symptoms was similar to the distribution of another European center.
Threshold distribution curves and eliciting doses are a powerful tool to compare different allergenic foods and for informing policy on precautionary labeling.
对于大多数致敏食物,由于人群中缺乏足够的阈值剂量信息,限制了关于预包装食品中应触发警示标签的意外致敏食物水平的建议。
我们希望得出主要致敏食物的阈值剂量分布,并详细说明可能引起过敏人群反应的蛋白质剂量。
从格罗宁根大学医学中心常规用于诊断食物过敏的儿童临床数据库中,选择了 7 种致敏食物的 7 项双盲、安慰剂对照食物挑战(DBPCFC),这些食物挑战均有过敏反应的阳性结果。对于每个过敏原,我们使用个体最小激发剂量和每个 DBPCFC 的前一个剂量,确定了 2 个人群阈值分布,用于客观症状和任何症状(主观或客观)。
我们获得了花生(n=135)、牛奶(n=93)、鸡蛋(n=53)、榛子(n=28)和腰果(n=31)的个体阳性 DBPCFC 结果。用大豆(n=10)或核桃(n=13)进行挑战的儿童较少。阈值剂量分布具有良好的统计学和直观拟合度。过敏人群中 5%可能出现客观反应的蛋白质剂量为花生 1.6mg、牛奶 1.1mg、鸡蛋 1.5mg、腰果 7.4mg 和榛子 0.29mg。任何症状的阈值平均比客观症状低 2 到 6 倍。阈值分布的 95%上限和下限置信区间重叠。客观症状的花生阈值分布与另一个欧洲中心的分布相似。
阈值分布曲线和激发剂量是比较不同致敏食物和为警示标签提供政策信息的有力工具。