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Kiwi fruit is a significant allergen and is associated with differing patterns of reactivity in children and adults

Kiwi fruit is a significant allergen and is associated with differing patterns of reactivity in children and adults
Kiwi fruit is a significant allergen and is associated with differing patterns of reactivity in children and adults
Background Allergy to kiwi fruit appears increasingly common, but few studies have evaluated its clinical characteristics, or evaluated methods of investigating the allergy.
Objective To characterize the clinical characteristics of kiwi fruit allergy and to study the role of double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge (DBPCFC), skin tests and specific IgE in the diagnosis of this food allergy.
Methods Two-hundred and seventy-three subjects with a history suggestive of allergy to kiwi completed a questionnaire. Forty-five were investigated by DBPCFC, prick-to-prick skin testing with fresh kiwi pulp, and specific IgE measurement. Nineteen subjects were also skin tested using a commercially available solution.
Results The most frequently reported symptoms were localized to the oral mucosa (65%), but severe symptoms (wheeze, cyanosis or collapse) were reported by 18% of subjects. Young children were significantly more likely than adults to react on their first known exposure (P<0.001), and to report severe symptoms (P=0.008). Twenty-four of 45 subjects (53%) had allergy confirmed by DBPCFC. Prick-to-prick skin test with fresh kiwi was positive in 93% of subjects who had allergy confirmed by DBPCFC, and also in 55% of subjects with a negative food challenge. The commercial extract was significantly less sensitive, but with fewer false-positive reactions. CAP sIgE was only positive in 54% of subjects who had a positive challenge.
Conclusions Kiwi fruit should be considered a significant food allergen, capable of causing severe reactions, particularly in young children. DBPCFC confirmed allergy to kiwi fruit in 53% of the subjects tested, who had a previous history suggestive of kiwi allergy. Skin testing with fresh fruit has good sensitivity (93%), but poor specificity (45%) in this population. CAP sIgE and a commercially available skin test solution were both much less sensitive (54%; 75%) but had better specificity (90%; 67%).
actinidia, allergens, double-blind methods, immunoglobulin E, kiwi fruit, skin tests
0954-7894
1115-1121
Lucas, J.S.A.
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Grimshaw, K.E.C.
766b6cf0-347a-447d-aeab-f07366f8ce28
Collins, K.
f8971ca6-bcf8-4282-85ce-900f2d45006c
Warner, J.O.
c232f1e5-62eb-46e6-8b0c-4836b45b36a5
Hourihane, O'B.
d1187a71-7831-4837-87ce-921349c0a0f9
Lucas, J.S.A.
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Grimshaw, K.E.C.
766b6cf0-347a-447d-aeab-f07366f8ce28
Collins, K.
f8971ca6-bcf8-4282-85ce-900f2d45006c
Warner, J.O.
c232f1e5-62eb-46e6-8b0c-4836b45b36a5
Hourihane, O'B.
d1187a71-7831-4837-87ce-921349c0a0f9

Lucas, J.S.A., Grimshaw, K.E.C., Collins, K., Warner, J.O. and Hourihane, O'B. (2004) Kiwi fruit is a significant allergen and is associated with differing patterns of reactivity in children and adults. Clinical & Experimental Allergy, 34 (7), 1115-1121. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2222.2004.01982.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background Allergy to kiwi fruit appears increasingly common, but few studies have evaluated its clinical characteristics, or evaluated methods of investigating the allergy.
Objective To characterize the clinical characteristics of kiwi fruit allergy and to study the role of double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge (DBPCFC), skin tests and specific IgE in the diagnosis of this food allergy.
Methods Two-hundred and seventy-three subjects with a history suggestive of allergy to kiwi completed a questionnaire. Forty-five were investigated by DBPCFC, prick-to-prick skin testing with fresh kiwi pulp, and specific IgE measurement. Nineteen subjects were also skin tested using a commercially available solution.
Results The most frequently reported symptoms were localized to the oral mucosa (65%), but severe symptoms (wheeze, cyanosis or collapse) were reported by 18% of subjects. Young children were significantly more likely than adults to react on their first known exposure (P<0.001), and to report severe symptoms (P=0.008). Twenty-four of 45 subjects (53%) had allergy confirmed by DBPCFC. Prick-to-prick skin test with fresh kiwi was positive in 93% of subjects who had allergy confirmed by DBPCFC, and also in 55% of subjects with a negative food challenge. The commercial extract was significantly less sensitive, but with fewer false-positive reactions. CAP sIgE was only positive in 54% of subjects who had a positive challenge.
Conclusions Kiwi fruit should be considered a significant food allergen, capable of causing severe reactions, particularly in young children. DBPCFC confirmed allergy to kiwi fruit in 53% of the subjects tested, who had a previous history suggestive of kiwi allergy. Skin testing with fresh fruit has good sensitivity (93%), but poor specificity (45%) in this population. CAP sIgE and a commercially available skin test solution were both much less sensitive (54%; 75%) but had better specificity (90%; 67%).

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More information

Published date: July 2004
Keywords: actinidia, allergens, double-blind methods, immunoglobulin E, kiwi fruit, skin tests

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 27242
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27242
ISSN: 0954-7894
PURE UUID: 97a6a6ed-a0dd-4a26-90f7-f0bda2551cd2
ORCID for J.S.A. Lucas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8701-9975

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 25 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:25

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Contributors

Author: J.S.A. Lucas ORCID iD
Author: K.E.C. Grimshaw
Author: K. Collins
Author: J.O. Warner
Author: O'B. Hourihane

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