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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Food antigen-specific IgE in dogs with suspected food hypersensitivity.

Journal:
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe K, Kleintiere/Heimtiere
Year:
2020
Authors:
Baumann, Sandra A et al.
Affiliation:
Small Animal Medicine Clinic
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

This study looked at blood tests for food allergies in dogs to see if some foods might cause reactions to other foods. Researchers analyzed results from 760 dogs suspected of having food allergies and found that certain pairs of related foods, like beef and lamb, often showed positive reactions together. They also found that chicken and duck, as well as pork and some grains, had similar patterns. The findings suggest that if a dog is allergic to one type of food, it might also react to others, even if they aren't closely related. Because of this, it's important to avoid using certain foods like beef and lamb in elimination diets, as this could lead to misleading results.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Knowledge of cross-reactions in food-sensitive dogs will influence the choice of elimination diets and the long-term management of those patients. The objective of this study was to evaluate food allergen-specific IgE tests of suspected allergic dogs for concurrent positive reactions as possible evidence for cross reactions between allergens. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Results of serum IgE tests from 760 suspected allergic dogs submitted to 2 laboratories were evaluated statistically. After the tested allergens were grouped by their phylogenetic relationship, odds ratios as well as a sensitivity analysis of the odds ratios were performed to evaluate if concurrent positive IgE results to 2 allergens occurred more often than expected. RESULTS: Within related allergen pairs 27% (laboratory 1) and 72% (laboratory 2) of the pairs could be considered as associated. For the unrelated allergen pairs only 6.8% and 10.6% of the analyzed pairs were considered associated respectively. Strong correlations were shown in the group of ruminant allergens, especially beef and lamb, and grain allergens. High rates of concurrent reactions were also detected in the poultry group, especially between chicken and duck, as well as between pork and ruminant allergens, and soy and grain allergens. CONCLUSION: As our results showed not only correlations within related but also between non-related allergens, the possible relevance of carbohydrate moieties as well as panallergens for canine hypersensitivities warrants further study. Further investigations are necessary to distinguish co-sensitization from cross-reactions and determine the clinical relevance of food-specific IgE reactivity. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Due to possible cross reactivity related allergens, especially beef and lamb as well as grain allergens, should not be used for an elimination diet to avoid false results.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33276389/