Treatment Difficulties in Wheat Oral Immunotherapy and the Predictive Value of Wheat-Specific IgE
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Factors associated with wheat oral immunotherapy (OIT) difficulties in patients with IgE-mediated wheat allergy have not been well studied.
Objective: We aimed to assess factors associated with difficulties in wheat OIT.
Methods: We retrospectively collected data from children under 18 years of age with history of IgE-mediated wheat allergy who underwent wheat OIT. The initial specific IgE (sIgE) of wheat and omega-5-gliadin, wheat skin prick test (SPT) sizes, eliciting doses, and adverse reactions during the OIT were evaluated.
Results: A total of 81 children were enrolled, with a mean age of 7.0 ± 2.7 years at the initiation of wheat OIT. The median follow-up duration was 2 years (IQR 1.2 -3.0 years). Difficulties in wheat OIT included patients who experienced frequent reactions (at least grade 2 or exercise-induced reactions) or deviated from the up-dosing protocol, which we defined as 'Complicated cases.' Twenty-six patients (32.1%) were complicated cases. Initial wheat-sIgEs were significantly higher in complicated cases than in noncomplicated cases (median of 192.3 kUA/L (IQR 30.4-590.0) vs 6.9 kUA/L (IQR 1.9-100.0) (p = 0.001)). Initial omega-5-gliadin-sIgEs in the complicated group were also significantly higher, with a median of 15.0 kUA/L (IQR 6.3-69.8) vs 1.6 kUA/L (IQR 0.2-11.4) (p < 0.001). The risk factors for complicated cases include higher omega-5-gliadin-sIgEs and anaphylaxis during the oral food challenge test (aOR 1.035 and 5.684, respectively).
Conclusion: The initial wheat and omega-5-gliadin-sIgEs were significant risk factors for complicated OIT patients and could be used to monitor these patients carefully during the OIT period.
The top 100 most cited articles in the past 30 years of wheat allergy: a bibliometric analysis.
Zhan M, Hou Y, Wen L, Xu T Front Immunol. 2024; 15:1381130.
PMID: 38711499 PMC: 11070576. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1381130.