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ID 118469
Author
Murai, Hiroki University of Fukui
Irahara, Makoto National Center for Child Health and Development KAKEN Search Researchers
Takaoka, Yuri Osaka Habikino Medical Center
Takahashi, Kyohei National Hospital Organization Sagamihara National Hospital
Wada, Takuya University of Toyama
Yamamoto-Hanada, Kiwako National Center for Child Health and Development
Okafuji, Ikuo Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital
Yamada, Yoshiyuki Gunma Children's Medical Center|Tokai University School of Medicine
Futamura, Masaki National Hospital Organization Nagoya Medical Center
Ebisawa, Motohiro National Hospital Organization Sagamihara National Hospital
Keywords
Complete elimination
Egg allergy
Oral food challenge
Systematic review
Quality of life
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Background: IgE-mediated egg allergy is a common food allergy worldwide. Patients with egg allergy are known to easily achieve tolerance compared to other allergens such as nuts. Oral food challenge (OFC) is often performed on patients diagnosed with or suspected of having IgE-mediated food allergy, but whether hen's egg OFC is useful in IgE-dependent egg allergy patients to avoid complete elimination remains unknown.
Methods: We identified articles in which OFCs were performed in Japanese patients diagnosed with or suspected of having IgE-mediated egg allergy. We evaluated whether the OFCs were useful to avoid the complete elimination of eggs by assessing the following: (1) the number of patients who could avoid complete elimination; (2) the number of patients who experienced serious adverse events (SAEs); or (3) adverse events (AEs); (4) improvement in quality of life (QOL); and (5) immunological changes.
Results: Fifty-nine articles were selected in the study; all the references were case series or case studies in which OFC was compared to pre-challenge conditions. The overall negative ratio against egg OFC was 62.7%, but an additional 71.9% of OFC-positive patients could take eggs when expanded to partial elimination. Of the 4182 cases, 1146 showed AEs in the OFC, and two cases reached an SAE. Two reports showed an improvement in QOL and immunological changes, although the evidence was weak.
Conclusions: OFCs against eggs may be useful to avoid complete elimination, but medical professionals should proceed with the test safely and carefully.
Journal Title
Allergology International
ISSN
13238930
14401592
NCID
AA11091750
Publisher
Japanese Society of Allergology|Elsevier
Volume
71
Issue
2
Start Page
221
End Page
229
Published Date
2021-10-16
Rights
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
EDB ID
DOI (Published Version)
URL ( Publisher's Version )
FullText File
language
eng
TextVersion
Publisher
departments
University Hospital
Medical Sciences