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Potential biomarkers, risk factors and their association with IgE-mediated food allergy in early life: a narrative review

Potential biomarkers, risk factors and their association with IgE-mediated food allergy in early life: a narrative review
Potential biomarkers, risk factors and their association with IgE-mediated food allergy in early life: a narrative review
Food allergy affects the quality of life of millions of people worldwide and presents a significant psychological and financial burden for both national and international public health. In the past few decades, the prevalence of allergic disease has been on the rise worldwide. Identified risk factors for food allergy include family history, mode of delivery, variations in infant feeding practices, prior diagnosis of other atopic diseases such as eczema, and social economic status. Identifying reliable biomarkers which predict the risk of developing food allergy in early life would be valuable in both preventing morbidity and mortality and by making current interventions available at the earliest opportunity. There is also the potential to identify new therapeutic targets. This narrative review provides details on the genetic, epigenetic, dietary and microbiome influences upon the development of food allergy and synthesizes the currently available data indicating potential biomarkers. While there is a large body of research evidence available within each field of potential risk factors, there are very limited number of studies which span multiple methodological fields, for example including immunology, microbiome, genetic/epigenetic factors and dietary assessment. We recommend that further collaborative research with detailed cohort phenotyping is required to identify biomarkers, and whether these vary between at-risk populations and the wider population. The low incidence of oral food challenge confirmed food allergy in the general population, and the complexities of designing nutritional intervention studies will provide challenges for researchers to address in generating high quality, reliable and reproducible research findings.
2156-5376
Childs, Caroline E.
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Munblit, Daniel
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Ulfman, Laurien
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Gomez-Gallego, Carlos
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Lehtoranta, Liisa
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Recker, Tobias
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Salminen, Seppo
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Tiemessen, Machteld
67b8dfad-316f-4cad-a6f7-0228e9847b3f
Collado, Maria Carmen
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Childs, Caroline E.
ea17ccc1-2eac-4f67-96c7-a0c4d9dfd9c5
Munblit, Daniel
caebf4a0-0825-43df-b797-a9d5ca7a475f
Ulfman, Laurien
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Gomez-Gallego, Carlos
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Lehtoranta, Liisa
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Recker, Tobias
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Salminen, Seppo
32479d18-cd60-4c5a-bed8-b2a3f9334ffc
Tiemessen, Machteld
67b8dfad-316f-4cad-a6f7-0228e9847b3f
Collado, Maria Carmen
12d5f87c-5867-4517-b114-339e1fc6fa87

Childs, Caroline E., Munblit, Daniel, Ulfman, Laurien, Gomez-Gallego, Carlos, Lehtoranta, Liisa, Recker, Tobias, Salminen, Seppo, Tiemessen, Machteld and Collado, Maria Carmen (2021) Potential biomarkers, risk factors and their association with IgE-mediated food allergy in early life: a narrative review. Advances in Nutrition. (doi:10.1093/advances/nmab122).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Food allergy affects the quality of life of millions of people worldwide and presents a significant psychological and financial burden for both national and international public health. In the past few decades, the prevalence of allergic disease has been on the rise worldwide. Identified risk factors for food allergy include family history, mode of delivery, variations in infant feeding practices, prior diagnosis of other atopic diseases such as eczema, and social economic status. Identifying reliable biomarkers which predict the risk of developing food allergy in early life would be valuable in both preventing morbidity and mortality and by making current interventions available at the earliest opportunity. There is also the potential to identify new therapeutic targets. This narrative review provides details on the genetic, epigenetic, dietary and microbiome influences upon the development of food allergy and synthesizes the currently available data indicating potential biomarkers. While there is a large body of research evidence available within each field of potential risk factors, there are very limited number of studies which span multiple methodological fields, for example including immunology, microbiome, genetic/epigenetic factors and dietary assessment. We recommend that further collaborative research with detailed cohort phenotyping is required to identify biomarkers, and whether these vary between at-risk populations and the wider population. The low incidence of oral food challenge confirmed food allergy in the general population, and the complexities of designing nutritional intervention studies will provide challenges for researchers to address in generating high quality, reliable and reproducible research findings.

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nmab122 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 September 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 October 2021
Published date: 1 October 2021
Additional Information: Copyright: The Author(s) 2021.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452101
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452101
ISSN: 2156-5376
PURE UUID: 7d8f11e1-0153-48e8-8361-4297a3555e9c
ORCID for Caroline E. Childs: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6832-224X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Nov 2021 17:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:15

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Contributors

Author: Daniel Munblit
Author: Laurien Ulfman
Author: Carlos Gomez-Gallego
Author: Liisa Lehtoranta
Author: Tobias Recker
Author: Seppo Salminen
Author: Machteld Tiemessen
Author: Maria Carmen Collado

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