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Allergies and EGIDs

Allergy Testing (skin prick, patch testing and RAST)
Once the diagnosis of EoE is confirmed, allergy testing is typically requested. In many situations, avoiding ‘allergens’ that trigger the eosinophils will be effective treatment. This may include both environmental allergens or food allergens.  In regards to foods, the reactions are not always ‘immediate hypersensitivity’ (IgE-mediated). This means that a food can be consumed with no obvious reaction to it, but over a period of days to weeks the eosinophils triggered by the food will cause inflammation and injury to the esophagus. For this reason, food logs (keeping track of foods and symptoms) may not identify the offending food. During food trials, an individual with EoE may try introducing a new single food and waiting a few days to weeks before introducing another food. Traditional percutaneous skin testing is very good at identifying immediate sensitivity (IgE-mediated) to environmental and food allergens.  Having a negative immediate percutaneous skin test results does not always mean an offending allergen is not an issue.  Sometimes a physician may recommend skin patch testing to look for delayed reactions.  At this time, intradermal allergy testing is not routinely recommended for diagnosis of EoE.

 
Skin prick testing is for IgE- mediated reactions (‘immediate hypersensitivity’). Skin prick testing involves ‘scratching’ small amounts of pure food or environmental allergens into the skin. A ‘wheal’ (bump) and flare (redness) greater than the negative control indicates a positive test. Both a positive control (one that should cause a wheal and flare) and negative control (should not cause a wheal and flare) are used.
 
Skin patch testing can be used when testing for delayed food reactions. Skin patch testing is most commonly used to test for dermatologic (skin) reactions. When used for food reactions, small amounts of a pure food are placed in tiny cups, which are then taped to the back. The foods will be chosen based on the patient’s diet, previous reactions, and prior skin prick test results. The patches are removed after 48 hours and read at 72 hours.
 
Example of Patch Testing
 
RAST (Radioallergosorbent test) or ImmunoCAP testing is not as helpful for identifying foods that cause EoE. Instead, RAST may be used to confirm an immediate reaction to a food (for instance, hives following a peanut butter sandwich). RAST testing identifies IgE antibodies for a specific food. 
 
IGG Elisa
IgG serum testing measure the IgG level to certain foods and allergens in blood serum.  This is also done in some commercial clinical laboratories.  Testing for serum IgG levels for foods has not been demonstrated scientifically to be useful in the diagnosis of immediate IgE-mediated allergies or diseases such as EoE.
 
 
Allergy FAQs
 
Question 1:  What is patch testing for foods?  Can patch testing help determine which foods are causing EoE?
 
Answer:  Patch testing or atopy patch testing is another way to test for food allergies.  To better understand patch testing, the differences between “regular” allergy testing and patch testing should be explored.  The standard or regular tests for food allergy are scratch test or prick skin test and RAST blood testing (also called CAP-RAST testing).  Prick skin testing examines IgE-mediated reactions.  IgE-mediated reactions occur within seconds to hours after ingestion of the food causing hives or anaphylaxis.  Patch testing examines for non-IgE mediated reactions.  These reactions are often delayed, occurring hours to days after ingestion of the food.  Many patients with non-IgE mediated reactions have difficulty in identifying the food causing the reactions.  Patch testing was first done in 1890’s for reactions to perfumes, dyes and metals.  Patch testing for foods have been done since 1990's in Europe and in the US since 2000.
 
Another major difference between prick skin tests and patch testing is the standardization of reagents.  The materials for prick skin testing are commercially available and standardized.  For prick skin testing, we use purified extracts and prick or scratch with a needle or specialized tool.  After scratching, the results are read for redness and swelling (wheal and flare) in 10-15 minutes.  In contrast, the reagents for patch testing are not standardized.   In patch testing, fresh foods are prepared into a porridge-like consistency and placed on aluminum chambers on the patient’s back for 48 hours.  The patches are then removed and read 24 hours later for redness and swelling. The preparation of the fresh food is not standardized and probably accounts for the variability in the testing results from one physician to another.  However, the time frame for reading, placement and scoring of the patch is standardized.
 
Most patients can identify the foods that are positive on prick skin testing as the immediate time frame from ingestion to reaction, thus helping the family and physician decide which foods to test for. This is not the case for patch testing.   Since there is a delayed reaction to foods and difficulty identifying foods, we typically screen for the most commons foods in the patient’s diet including milk, soy, egg, grains and meats. 
 
The adverse effect from either prick skin testing or patch testing is minimal.  You can get local itching and swelling at the site of skin testing, which typically resolves within 1 hour.   The most common reaction from patch testing is minor skin irritation by the tape, which resolves with 24 hours.  Occasionally, patients have a strong positive patch test reaction that take about 4-7 days to resolve.
 
Other testing including IgG, Immune-complexes to foods have not been well studied in food allergy.
 
We instruct our patients to avoid all the foods that are positive on skin test or patch testing. Patients reported improvement in symptoms and normalization in biopsies about 75% of the time, including the patients that were started directly on elemental diet for nutritional reasons.  The reasons for missing foods in 25% include not testing for the appropriate foods, poor testing techniques or non-compliance with diet. It is also important to note that testing can have false positives or false negatives, by either skin testing or patch testing and biopsies remain the gold standard.
 
Dr. Jonathan Spergel, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
 
Question : Do environmental allergies play a bigger role in EGID than originally thought?  
 
Answer: They might, in some cases, it depends on the specific patient and the type of allergies.  Most likely, yes, environmental factors can play a role in eosinophilic disorders.  Allergic reactions do not occur exclusively in the GI tract; various systems are processes are linked.  What you breathe in might make you more prone to react.  Dr Marc Rothenberg of Cincinnati Children’s has shown in his research that mice develop EoE after mold has been introduced to their lungs.  This process is not proven in humans, but we think that people develop EoE as a combination of genetic and environmental factors; someone might be more prone to develop EoE genetically, but the disorder only develops when a specific set of conditions in their outside environment trigger the response.  Limiting exposure to known environmental allergens is recommended to help reduce reactions.
 
Question : Are food trials recommended during the seasonal allergy season that affects the patient?
 
Answer: If a patient is sick or having symptoms, it is not recommended to trial foods. The level of reactions of an allergic patient during the allergy season is increased, leaving a patient at risk for more severe reactions and false positives to a food during a trial, and thus it is preferable not to test during this time.
 
Question :  I've read that many people with eosinophilic esophagitis have a soybean allergy.  Is soy lecithin okay to ingest?  I've found it in several things including ice cream, chocolate candy bars, chewing gum and vitamins, to name a few examples.
 
Answer: The great majority of food allergies are to food proteins.  Lecithin is a phospholipid (a type of fat) and I would not expect an allergic reaction to it. Some patients, however, could react to a product containing soy lecithin due to cross contamination of other soy protein during the manufacturing process.
  
Jesus R. Guajardo, M.D., M.H.P.E.
Allergy and Pulmonary Division
University of Missouri at Columbia
 
Videos:
 
 
 
 
© American Partnership for Eosinophilic Disorders 2008
Revised 4-10-2011. Authors: Wendy Book MD, Harvey Leo MD