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Comparison of the Performance of Skin Prick, ImmunoCAP, and ISAC Tests in the Diagnosis of Patients with Allergy.
Int Arch Allergy Immunol. 2017; 172(4):215-223.IA

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Allergy is diagnosed from typical symptoms, and tests are performed to incriminate the suspected precipitant. Skin prick tests (SPTs) are commonly performed, inexpensive, and give immediate results. Laboratory tests (ImmunoCAP) for serum allergen-specific IgE antibodies are usually performed more selectively. The immuno-solid phase allergen chip (ISAC) enables testing for specific IgE against multiple allergen components in a multiplex assay.

METHODS

We retrospectively analysed clinic letters, case notes, and laboratory results of 118 patients attending the National Adult Allergy Service at the University Hospital of Wales who presented diagnostic difficulty, to evaluate which testing strategy (SPT, ImmunoCAP, or ISAC) was the most appropriate to use to confirm the diagnosis in these complex patients, evaluated in a "real-life" clinical service setting.

RESULTS

In patients with nut allergy, the detection rates of SPTs (56%) and ISAC (65%) were lower than those of ImmunoCAP (71%). ISAC had a higher detection rate (88%) than ImmunoCAP (69%) or SPT (33%) in the diagnosis of oral allergy syndrome. ImmunoCAP test results identified all 9 patients with anaphylaxis due to wheat allergy (100%), whereas ISAC was positive in only 6 of these 9 (67%).

CONCLUSIONS

In this difficult diagnostic group, the ImmunoCAP test should be the preferred single test for possible allergy to nuts, wheat, other specific foods, and anaphylaxis of any cause. In these conditions, SPT and ISAC tests give comparable results. The most useful single test for oral allergy syndrome is ISAC, and SPT should be the preferred test for latex allergy.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Immunology, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28456812

Citation

Griffiths, Rebecca L M., et al. "Comparison of the Performance of Skin Prick, ImmunoCAP, and ISAC Tests in the Diagnosis of Patients With Allergy." International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, vol. 172, no. 4, 2017, pp. 215-223.
Griffiths RLM, El-Shanawany T, Jolles SRA, et al. Comparison of the Performance of Skin Prick, ImmunoCAP, and ISAC Tests in the Diagnosis of Patients with Allergy. Int Arch Allergy Immunol. 2017;172(4):215-223.
Griffiths, R. L. M., El-Shanawany, T., Jolles, S. R. A., Selwood, C., Heaps, A. G., Carne, E. M., & Williams, P. E. (2017). Comparison of the Performance of Skin Prick, ImmunoCAP, and ISAC Tests in the Diagnosis of Patients with Allergy. International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 172(4), 215-223. https://doi.org/10.1159/000464326
Griffiths RLM, et al. Comparison of the Performance of Skin Prick, ImmunoCAP, and ISAC Tests in the Diagnosis of Patients With Allergy. Int Arch Allergy Immunol. 2017;172(4):215-223. PubMed PMID: 28456812.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Comparison of the Performance of Skin Prick, ImmunoCAP, and ISAC Tests in the Diagnosis of Patients with Allergy. AU - Griffiths,Rebecca L M, AU - El-Shanawany,Tariq, AU - Jolles,Stephen R A, AU - Selwood,Clive, AU - Heaps,Adrian G, AU - Carne,Emily M, AU - Williams,Paul E, Y1 - 2017/04/29/ PY - 2017/01/09/received PY - 2017/02/21/accepted PY - 2017/5/1/pubmed PY - 2017/8/30/medline PY - 2017/5/1/entrez KW - Allergen-specific IgE (ImmunoCAP) tests KW - Allergy diagnosis KW - Component-resolved diagnostics KW - ISAC allergen array KW - Sensitivity KW - Skin prick tests KW - Specificity SP - 215 EP - 223 JF - International archives of allergy and immunology JO - Int Arch Allergy Immunol VL - 172 IS - 4 N2 - BACKGROUND: Allergy is diagnosed from typical symptoms, and tests are performed to incriminate the suspected precipitant. Skin prick tests (SPTs) are commonly performed, inexpensive, and give immediate results. Laboratory tests (ImmunoCAP) for serum allergen-specific IgE antibodies are usually performed more selectively. The immuno-solid phase allergen chip (ISAC) enables testing for specific IgE against multiple allergen components in a multiplex assay. METHODS: We retrospectively analysed clinic letters, case notes, and laboratory results of 118 patients attending the National Adult Allergy Service at the University Hospital of Wales who presented diagnostic difficulty, to evaluate which testing strategy (SPT, ImmunoCAP, or ISAC) was the most appropriate to use to confirm the diagnosis in these complex patients, evaluated in a "real-life" clinical service setting. RESULTS: In patients with nut allergy, the detection rates of SPTs (56%) and ISAC (65%) were lower than those of ImmunoCAP (71%). ISAC had a higher detection rate (88%) than ImmunoCAP (69%) or SPT (33%) in the diagnosis of oral allergy syndrome. ImmunoCAP test results identified all 9 patients with anaphylaxis due to wheat allergy (100%), whereas ISAC was positive in only 6 of these 9 (67%). CONCLUSIONS: In this difficult diagnostic group, the ImmunoCAP test should be the preferred single test for possible allergy to nuts, wheat, other specific foods, and anaphylaxis of any cause. In these conditions, SPT and ISAC tests give comparable results. The most useful single test for oral allergy syndrome is ISAC, and SPT should be the preferred test for latex allergy. SN - 1423-0097 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28456812/full_citation DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -