Serum basal tryptase may be a good marker for predicting the risk of anaphylaxis in children with food allergy
A relationship between serum basal tryptase (sBT) levels, anaphylactic reactions, and clonal mast cell diseases was shown recently in adults with venom allergy, but the relationship between sBT levels and IgE‐mediated food allergy and anaphylaxis is not known. In this study, children with food aller...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Allergy (Copenhagen) 2014-02, Vol.69 (2), p.265-268 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A relationship between serum basal tryptase (sBT) levels, anaphylactic reactions, and clonal mast cell diseases was shown recently in adults with venom allergy, but the relationship between sBT levels and IgE‐mediated food allergy and anaphylaxis is not known. In this study, children with food allergy (FA; n = 167) were analyzed in two groups according to the presence (FA+/A+; n = 79) or absence of anaphylaxis (FA+/A−; n = 88) and were compared with a control group (n = 113). Median sBT values in FA+/A+, FA+/A−, and control groups were 4.0 ng/ml (2.8–5.8), 3.6 (2.3–4.5), and 3.3 (2.4–4.4), respectively (P = 0.022). sBT measurements higher than the cutoff values of 5.7 and 14.5 were associated with 50% and 90% predicted probabilities, respectively, of moderate to severe anaphylaxis. Children with tree nuts/peanut allergies had significantly higher levels of sBT than children with milk and egg allergy (P = 0.022). Results suggest that sBT levels may predict moderate to severe anaphylaxis in children with food allergy, which may follow a particular pattern according to the food allergy phenotype. |
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ISSN: | 0105-4538 1398-9995 |
DOI: | 10.1111/all.12317 |