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Accurate and reproducible diagnosis of peanut allergy using epitope mapping
Author(s) -
SuárezFariñas Mayte,
Suprun Maria,
Kearney Paul,
Getts Robert,
Grishina Galina,
Hayward Clive,
Luta David,
Porter Alex,
Witmer Marc,
du Toit George,
Lack Gideon,
Chinthrajah Rebecca Sharon,
Galli Stephen J.,
Nadeau Kari,
Sampson Hugh A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.363
H-Index - 173
eISSN - 1398-9995
pISSN - 0105-4538
DOI - 10.1111/all.14905
Subject(s) - peanut allergy , medicine , immunoglobulin e , cohort , allergy , epitope , immunology , placebo , predictive value of tests , food allergy , antibody , pathology , alternative medicine
Background Accurate diagnosis of peanut allergy is a significant clinical challenge. Here, a novel diagnostic blood test using the peanut bead‐based epitope assay (“peanut BBEA”) was developed utilizing the LEAP cohort and then validated using two independent cohorts. Methods The development of the peanut BBEA diagnostic test followed the National Academy of Medicine's established guidelines with discovery performed on 133 subjects from the non‐interventional arm of the LEAP trial and an independent validation performed on 82 subjects from the CoFAR2 and 84 subjects from the POISED study. All samples were analyzed using the peanut BBEA methodology, which measures levels of IgE to two Ara h 2 sequential (linear) epitopes and compares their combination to a threshold pre‐specified in the model development phase. When a patient has an inconclusive outcome by skin prick testing (or sIgE), IgE antibody levels to this combination of two epitopes can distinguish whether the patient is “Allergic” or “Not Allergic.” Diagnoses of peanut allergy in all subjects were confirmed by double‐blind placebo‐controlled food challenge and subjects’ ages were 7–55 years. Results In the validation using CoFAR2 and POISED cohorts, the peanut BBEA diagnostic test correctly diagnosed 93% of the subjects, with a sensitivity of 92%, specificity of 94%, a positive predictive value of 91%, and negative predictive value of 95%. Conclusions In validation of the peanut BBEA diagnostic test, the overall accuracy was found to be superior to existing diagnostic tests for peanut allergy including skin prick testing, peanut sIgE, and peanut component sIgE testing.

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