Urashima Mitsuyoshi, Kasamatsu Ayu, Tachimoto Hiroshi
Division of Molecular Epidemiology, the Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Pediatrics, the Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Glob. 2024 Jun 12;3(3):100291. doi: 10.1016/j.jacig.2024.100291. eCollection 2024 Aug.
The dietary fat hypothesis links increases in allergic diseases to reduced consumption of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids from fish, for example, eicosapentaenoic acid, and increased intake of n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids from vegetable oils, for example, arachidonic acid.
Building upon the "fat hypothesis," we sought to investigate the association between 24 types of serum fatty acid levels in infants and the risk of subsequent food-induced anaphylaxis (FIA) by age 2 years as the primary outcome.
This study was conducted as a prespecified supplemental analysis within the ABC randomized clinical trial. We measured levels of 24 fatty acids in residual serum samples collected from 268 infants at age 5 to 6 months using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.
Among the 258 infants, 58 exhibited immediate-type food allergies, whereas 200 showed no food allergy. Of the 58 infants, 12 were diagnosed with FIA, whereas the remaining 46 had nonanaphylactic food allergy. Unexpectedly, among the 24 fatty acids, only adrenic acid, also known as docosatetraenoic acid, which is one of the n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids, showed significantly lower levels in infants with FIA (median [interquartile range] (wt.%), 0.16 [0.14-0.17]), compared with those with no food allergy (0.19 [0.17-0.21]) ( = .0007). In contrast, adrenic acid levels in infants with nonanaphylactic food allergy were 0.19 [0.16-0.21] (wt.%), which did not differ significantly from those in infants with no food allergy ( = .69).
This study generated a hypothesis suggesting that infants with low serum adrenic acid levels might be at greater risk of subsequent FIA. This unexpected result warrants further investigation.
饮食脂肪假说将过敏性疾病的增加与鱼类中n-3多不饱和脂肪酸(如二十碳五烯酸)的摄入量减少以及植物油中n-6多不饱和脂肪酸(如花生四烯酸)的摄入量增加联系起来。
基于“脂肪假说”,我们试图研究婴儿24种血清脂肪酸水平与2岁前随后发生食物诱导的过敏反应(FIA)风险之间的关联,将其作为主要结果。
本研究作为ABC随机临床试验中的一项预先指定的补充分析进行。我们使用气相色谱-质谱法测量了从268名5至6个月大的婴儿收集的残余血清样本中24种脂肪酸的水平。
在这258名婴儿中,58名表现出速发型食物过敏,而200名未表现出食物过敏。在这58名婴儿中,12名被诊断为FIA,其余46名患有非过敏性食物过敏。出乎意料的是,在这24种脂肪酸中,只有肾上腺酸(也称为二十二碳四烯酸,是n-6多不饱和脂肪酸之一)在患有FIA的婴儿中的水平显著低于无食物过敏的婴儿(中位数[四分位间距](重量%),0.16[0.14-0.17]),而无食物过敏的婴儿为0.19[0.17-0.21](P = 0.0007)。相比之下,患有非过敏性食物过敏的婴儿中肾上腺酸水平为0.19[0.16-0.21](重量%),与无食物过敏的婴儿相比无显著差异(P = 0.69)。
本研究提出了一个假说,即血清肾上腺酸水平低的婴儿随后发生FIA的风险可能更高。这一意外结果值得进一步研究。