Biomarkers of severity and threshold of allergic reactions during oral peanut challenges

Alexandra F Santos, George Du Toit, Colin O'Rourke, Natalia Becares, Natália Couto-Francisco, Suzana Radulovic, Ekaterina Khaleva, Monica Basting, Kristina M Harris, David Larson, Peter Sayre, Marshall Plaut, Graham Roberts, Henry T Bahnson, Gideon Lack

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

108 Citations (Scopus)
150 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background: Oral food challenge (OFC) is the criterion standard to assess peanut allergy (PA), but it involves a risk of allergic reactions of unpredictable severity. 


Objective: Our aim was to identify biomarkers for risk of severe reactions or low dose threshold during OFC to peanut. 


Methods: We assessed Learning Early about Peanut Allergy study, Persistance of Oral Tolerance to Peanut study, and Peanut Allergy Sensitization study participants by administering the basophil activation test (BAT) and the skin prick test (SPT) and measuring the levels of peanut-specific IgE, Arachis hypogaea 2–specific IgE, and peanut-specific IgG4, and we analyzed the utility of the different biomarkers in relation to PA status, severity, and threshold dose of allergic reactions to peanut during OFC. 


Results: When a previously defined optimal cutoff was used, the BAT diagnosed PA with 98% specificity and 75% sensitivity. The BAT identified severe reactions with 97% specificity and 100% sensitivity. The SPT, level of Arachis hypogaea 2–specific IgE, level of peanut-specific IgE, and IgG4/IgE ratio also had 100% sensitivity but slightly lower specificity (92%, 93%, 90%, and 88%, respectively) to predict severity. Participants with lower thresholds of reactivity had higher basophil activation to peanut in vitro. The SPT and the BAT were the best individual predictors of threshold. Multivariate models were superior to individual biomarkers and were used to generate nomograms to calculate the probability of serious adverse events during OFC for individual patients. 


Conclusions: The BAT diagnosed PA with high specificity and identified severe reactors and low threshold with high specificity and high sensitivity. The BAT was the best biomarker for severity, surpassed only by the SPT in predicting threshold. Nomograms can help estimate the likelihood of severe reactions and reactions to a low dose of allergen in individual patients with PA.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)344-355
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Volume146
Issue number2
Early online date18 Apr 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2020

Keywords

  • Basophil
  • LEAP study
  • adverse events
  • basophil activation test
  • diagnosis
  • food allergy
  • peanut allergy
  • severity
  • threshold

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Biomarkers of severity and threshold of allergic reactions during oral peanut challenges'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this