APA
Betancor, Diana & Gomez Lopez, Alicia & Villalobos Vilda, Carlos & Nuñez Borque, Emilio & Fernández Bravo, Sergio & De las Heras Gozalo, Manuel & Pastor Vargas, Carlos & Esteban, Vanesa & Cuesta Herranz, Javier .LTP Allergy Follow-Up Study: Development of Allergy to New Plant Foods 10 Years Later.
ISO 690
Betancor, Diana & Gomez Lopez, Alicia & Villalobos Vilda, Carlos & Nuñez Borque, Emilio & Fernández Bravo, Sergio & De las Heras Gozalo, Manuel & Pastor Vargas, Carlos & Esteban, Vanesa & Cuesta Herranz, Javier. LTP Allergy Follow-Up Study: Development of Allergy to New Plant Foods 10 Years Later.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/24570
Resumen:
Introduction: Allergy to nonspecific lipid transfer protein (nsLTP) is the main cause of
plant-food allergy in Spain. nsLTPs are widely distributed in the plant kingdom and have high crossreactivity but extremely variable clinical expression. Little is known about the natural evolution of this
allergy, which complicates management. The objective of this study was to assess the development
of allergy to new plant foods in nsLTP-sensitized patients 10 years after diagnosis. Methods: One
hundred fifty-one patients showing specific IgE to nsLTP determined by ISAC (Thermofisher) were
included. After clinical workup (i.e., anamnesis, skin test, and challenge when needed), these patients
were divided into two groups: 113 patients allergic to one or more plant food (74.5%) and 38 patients
not allergic to any plant food (25.1%). Ten years later, a telephone interview was conducted to check
whether patients had developed additional allergic reactions to plant foods. Results: Ten years after
diagnosis, 35 of the 113 (31%) plant-food-allergic patients sensitized to nsLTP reported reactions
to new, previously tolerated plant foods, mainly Rosaceae/Prunoideae fruits and nuts followed by
vegetables, Rosacea/Pomoideae fruits, legumes, and cereals. Five out of 38 (13.2%) patients previously
sensitized to nsLTP but without allergy to any plant food had experienced allergic reactions to some
plant food: two to Rosaceae/Prunoideae fruits, two to Rosaceae/Prunoideae fruit and nuts, and one
to legumes. Conclusion: Patients sensitized to nsLTP developed allergic reactions to other plant
foods, mainly Rosaceae-Prunoideae fruits and nuts. This was more frequent among plant-food-allergic
patients than among those who had never had plant-food allergy.
Keywords: nsLTP; plant-food allergy; Pru p 3; peach; nut; Rosaceae fruit; ISAC