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Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens

BACKGROUND: Diagnosis of pollen allergies is mainly based on test allergens for skin prick testing. In the minimum battery of test inhalant allergens recommended by the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network 10 pollen allergens are included. Complementary other pollen allergens may need to be co...

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Autores principales: Höflich, Conny, Balakirski, Galina, Hajdu, Zuzanna, Baron, Jens Malte, Fietkau, Katharina, Merk, Hans F., Strassen, Ulrich, Bier, Henning, Dott, Wolfgang, Mücke, Hans‐Guido, Straff, Wolfgang, Wurpts, Gerda, Yazdi, Amir S., Chaker, Adam, Röseler, Stefani T. M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8488942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34631010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clt2.12058
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author Höflich, Conny
Balakirski, Galina
Hajdu, Zuzanna
Baron, Jens Malte
Fietkau, Katharina
Merk, Hans F.
Strassen, Ulrich
Bier, Henning
Dott, Wolfgang
Mücke, Hans‐Guido
Straff, Wolfgang
Wurpts, Gerda
Yazdi, Amir S.
Chaker, Adam
Röseler, Stefani T. M.
author_facet Höflich, Conny
Balakirski, Galina
Hajdu, Zuzanna
Baron, Jens Malte
Fietkau, Katharina
Merk, Hans F.
Strassen, Ulrich
Bier, Henning
Dott, Wolfgang
Mücke, Hans‐Guido
Straff, Wolfgang
Wurpts, Gerda
Yazdi, Amir S.
Chaker, Adam
Röseler, Stefani T. M.
author_sort Höflich, Conny
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Diagnosis of pollen allergies is mainly based on test allergens for skin prick testing. In the minimum battery of test inhalant allergens recommended by the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network 10 pollen allergens are included. Complementary other pollen allergens may need to be considered; however, respective awareness may not always be granted. Furthermore, at least in Germany, the situation may be even more complicated by the fact that test allergens need regulatory approval. A decline in commercially available test allergens may result in a diagnostic gap regarding patients with non‐frequent allergies. How many patients with non‐frequent pollen allergies would be affected by this gap? The data presented here partly answer this question. METHODS: The study consisted of a descriptive and an analytical part. In the descriptive part, sensitization to frequent pollen allergens (alder, hazel, birch, sweet grasses; according to the German Therapy Allergen Ordinance) and to respective non‐frequent pollen allergens (cypress, Japanese cedar, ash, plane tree, olive, Bermuda grass, wall pellitory, plantain, goosefoot, mugwort, ragweed, and saltwort) was measured in adult patients with physician‐diagnosed allergic rhinitis from two German federal states, namely North‐Rhine Westphalia (n = 360) and Bavaria (n = 339), using skin prick testing and/or ISAC technology. Furthermore, respective regional pollen data were assessed. In the analytical part, sensitization data were correlated with each other and with anamnestic data on symptom periods. RESULTS: Sensitization to frequent pollen allergens ranged from 45% (sIgE to Aln g 1/Alder, NRW) to 72% (prick test reactivity to birch, NRW). Sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens ranged from 0% (sIgE to Amb a 1/ragweed, NRW) to 41% (prick test reactivity to olive, Bavaria). Sensitization data partly correlated with each other and in connection with symptom periods showed a partly similar seasonal pattern as pollen data. CONCLUSIONS: Sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens have to be considered when examining patients with respective seasonal symptoms, and test (and respective therapy) allergens for non‐frequent pollen allergies need to be available. Further prerequisites for adequate patient management would be a nationwide pollen monitoring system giving continuous pollen data and a systematic sensitization monitoring at patient level.
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spelling pubmed-84889422021-10-08 Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens Höflich, Conny Balakirski, Galina Hajdu, Zuzanna Baron, Jens Malte Fietkau, Katharina Merk, Hans F. Strassen, Ulrich Bier, Henning Dott, Wolfgang Mücke, Hans‐Guido Straff, Wolfgang Wurpts, Gerda Yazdi, Amir S. Chaker, Adam Röseler, Stefani T. M. Clin Transl Allergy Research BACKGROUND: Diagnosis of pollen allergies is mainly based on test allergens for skin prick testing. In the minimum battery of test inhalant allergens recommended by the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network 10 pollen allergens are included. Complementary other pollen allergens may need to be considered; however, respective awareness may not always be granted. Furthermore, at least in Germany, the situation may be even more complicated by the fact that test allergens need regulatory approval. A decline in commercially available test allergens may result in a diagnostic gap regarding patients with non‐frequent allergies. How many patients with non‐frequent pollen allergies would be affected by this gap? The data presented here partly answer this question. METHODS: The study consisted of a descriptive and an analytical part. In the descriptive part, sensitization to frequent pollen allergens (alder, hazel, birch, sweet grasses; according to the German Therapy Allergen Ordinance) and to respective non‐frequent pollen allergens (cypress, Japanese cedar, ash, plane tree, olive, Bermuda grass, wall pellitory, plantain, goosefoot, mugwort, ragweed, and saltwort) was measured in adult patients with physician‐diagnosed allergic rhinitis from two German federal states, namely North‐Rhine Westphalia (n = 360) and Bavaria (n = 339), using skin prick testing and/or ISAC technology. Furthermore, respective regional pollen data were assessed. In the analytical part, sensitization data were correlated with each other and with anamnestic data on symptom periods. RESULTS: Sensitization to frequent pollen allergens ranged from 45% (sIgE to Aln g 1/Alder, NRW) to 72% (prick test reactivity to birch, NRW). Sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens ranged from 0% (sIgE to Amb a 1/ragweed, NRW) to 41% (prick test reactivity to olive, Bavaria). Sensitization data partly correlated with each other and in connection with symptom periods showed a partly similar seasonal pattern as pollen data. CONCLUSIONS: Sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens have to be considered when examining patients with respective seasonal symptoms, and test (and respective therapy) allergens for non‐frequent pollen allergies need to be available. Further prerequisites for adequate patient management would be a nationwide pollen monitoring system giving continuous pollen data and a systematic sensitization monitoring at patient level. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8488942/ /pubmed/34631010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clt2.12058 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Clinical and Translational Allergy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Höflich, Conny
Balakirski, Galina
Hajdu, Zuzanna
Baron, Jens Malte
Fietkau, Katharina
Merk, Hans F.
Strassen, Ulrich
Bier, Henning
Dott, Wolfgang
Mücke, Hans‐Guido
Straff, Wolfgang
Wurpts, Gerda
Yazdi, Amir S.
Chaker, Adam
Röseler, Stefani T. M.
Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
title Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
title_full Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
title_fullStr Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
title_full_unstemmed Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
title_short Management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: Diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
title_sort management of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis: diagnostic consideration of sensitization to non‐frequent pollen allergens
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8488942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34631010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clt2.12058
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