
PD20 ‐ Hospital admissions for food‐induced anaphylaxis in Italian children: a new report for the years 2006‐2011
Author(s) -
Nocerino Rita,
Leone Ludovica,
Pezzella Vincenza,
Terrin Gianluca,
Troncone Riccardo,
Berni Canani Roberto
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
clinical and translational allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.979
H-Index - 37
ISSN - 2045-7022
DOI - 10.1186/2045-7022-4-s1-p20
Subject(s) - medicine , anaphylaxis , incidence (geometry) , christian ministry , food allergy , pediatrics , emergency medicine , allergy , immunology , philosophy , physics , theology , optics
Background During the last decade an increased incidence of food induced anaphylaxis has been demonstrated in Western Countries. We reported an increased incidence of hospi- tal admission for food induced anaphylaxis in Italy from 2001 to 2005. We aimed to explore if this trend persists investigating the number of hospital admissions for food-induced anaphylaxis in Italy. Methods The Italian Ministry of Health database was asked about hospital admissions for food-induced anaphylaxis from the year 2006; data were available up to year 2011. We identi- fied hospital admissions for food-induced anaphylaxis using the following specific codes: ICD-9 codes: 99560, 99561, 99562, 99563, 99564, 99565, 99566, 99567, 99568, 99569. We investigated the total number of ordinary and day hospital admissions over the 6 years period, and the type of food responsible for the disease. The number of deaths for food-induced anaphylaxis was also recorded. Results A total of 3121 admission for food-induced anaphylaxis (1454 ordinary admissions and 1667 day hospital; 57.7% male; mean age 14.28 years; minimum 0-maximum 92 years; 2253 in Northern Regions and 868 in Southern Regions) occurred during the 5 years study period. For the age 0-14 years, a total of 2252 admissions for food-induced anaphylaxis (1044 ordinary admissions e 1208 day hospi- tal) occurred during the 5 year study period. In the same age group, a continuous increasing trend was observed: in the year 2006 the total number of hospital admissions for food-induced anaphylaxis was 270, comparing to 479 admissions for the year 2011 (+77.4%). The foods respon- sible for anaphylaxis in this age group were: cow’s milk (36.3%), hen’s egg (21.1%), nuts and seeds (3%), fruits and vegetables (2.9%), fish (2.3%), peanuts (1.7%), crustaceans (1.1%), other specified foods in 7.1%. anaphylaxis caused by food additives was reported in 0.4% of subjects, and for 24% of cases the responsible food was unavailable. We identified 4 deaths for food-induced anaphylaxis all occurred at hospital and in patients aged >14 years. The food responsible were peanuts, crustaceans, fruits and vegetables; in one case the food responsible was not identified. Conclusions A persistent increasing pattern for food-induced anaphy- laxis occurred in the last decade in Italy. Our data suggest the importance of more research to investigate the causa- tive factors and the necessity to improve the healthcare service for this condition