Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-jr42d Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-17T18:12:40.956Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Prevalence of food allergy: an overview

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2007

Charlotte Madsen
Affiliation:
Department of Toxicology and Risk Assessment, Danish Institute for Food and Veterinary Research, 19 Mørkhøj Bygade, DK 2860 Søborg, Denmark
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

At present the only cure for food allergy is to avoid eating the food responsible for the allergy. Thus, food allergy or food hypersensitivity is a disease that is not only of concern to the individual who is affected but also to those involved directly and indirectly in supplying andpreparing food for the food-allergic individual, and its impact on society should be evaluated on this basis. It is generally assumed that questionnaire-based studies vastly overestimate the prevalence of food hypersensitivity. The reported perceived prevalence of food hypersensitivity varies from 3.24% to 34.9%, which may be explained partly by the difference in reporting lifetime prevalence compared with point prevalence. However, of more importance is the apparent inverse correlation between response rate and prevalence (the higher the response rate, the lower the perceived prevalence). The three most-recent prevalence studies on food hypersensitivity (one on perceived food hypersensitivity and two on confirmed food hypersensitivity) all report estimates for prevalence of approximately 3%, but their criteria for including subjects as being positive are not identical, although they do overlap. Furthermore, because of differences in methodology there is no definitive information to indicate whether the prevalence of food allergy is increasing. However, the high prevalence of pollen-related food allergy in younger adults in the population suggests that the increase in pollen allergy is also being accompanied by an increase in pollen-related food allergy.

Type
Symposium on ‘Reacting to allergy’
Copyright
Copyright © The Nutrition Society 2005

References

Bengtsson, U, Nilsson-Balknäs, U, Hanson, & Ahlstedt, S (1996) Double blind, placebo controlled food reactions do not correlate to IgE allergy in the diagnosis of stable food related gastrointestinal symptoms. Gut 39, 130135.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Björnsson, E, Janson, C, Plaschke, P, Norramn, E & Sjöberg, O (1996) Prevalence of sensitization to food allergens in adult Swedes. Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology 77, 327332.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bruijnzeel-Koomen, C, Ortolani, C, Aas, K, Bindselv-Jensen, C, Björkstén, B, Moneret-Vautin, D & Wütrich, B (1995) Adverse reactions to food. Allergy 50, 623635.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dalal, I, Binson, I, Reifen, R, Amitai, Z, Shohat, T, Rahmani, S, Levine, A, Ballin, A & Somekh, E (2002) Food allergy is a matter of geography after all: sesame as a major cause of severe IgE-mediated food allergic reactions among infants and young children in Israel. Allergy 57, 362365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
EuroPrevall (2005) The prevalence, cost and basis of food allergy across Europe (EuroPrevall). http://www5.ifr.bbsrc.ac.uk/europrevall/ Google Scholar
Feighery, C (2005) Coeliac disease. British Medical Journal 319, 236239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuglsang, G, Madsen, C, Saval, P & Østerballe, O (1993) Prevalence of intolerance to food additives among Danish school children. Pediatric Allergy and Immunology 4, 123129.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hill, DJ, Hosking, CS, Zhie, CY, Leung, R, Baratwidjaja, K, Iikura, Y, Iyngkaran, N, Gonzales-Andaya, A, Wah, LB & Hsien, KH (1997) The frequency of food allergy in Australia and Asia. Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology 4, 101110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Informall EU Project (2005) Informall database on allergenic foods. http://foodallergens.ifr.ac.uk/ Google Scholar
Ivarsson, A, Persson, LA, Nystrom, L, Ascher, H, Cavell, B, Danielsson, L, Dannaeus, A, Lindberg, T, Lindquist, B, Stenhammar, L & Hernell, O (2000) Epidemic of celiac disease in Swedish children. Acta Paediatrica 89, 165171.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jansen, JJN, Kardinaal, AFM, Huijbers, G, Vlieg-Boersta, J, Martens, BPM & Ockhuizen, T (1994) Prevalence of food allergy and intolerance in the adult Dutch population. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 93, 446456.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jenkins, JA, Sancho, A, Madsen, C, Shewry, PR & Mills, ENC (2005) What do we know about plant food allergens. Agro-Food Industry High-Tech 16, 2729.Google Scholar
Johansson, SGO, Hourihane, JO, Bousquet, J, Bruijnzeel-Koomen, C, Dreborg, S & Haahtela, T et al. . (2001) A revised nomenclature for allergy. Allergy 56, 813824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kanny, G, Moneret-Vautrin, D-A, Flabbee, J, Beaudouin, E, Morisset, M & Thevenin, F (2001) Population study of food allergy in France. Allergy 108, 133140.Google ScholarPubMed
Keiding, L (1997) Astma, Allergi og Anden Overfølsomhed i Danmark – Og Udviklingen 1987–1991. (Asthma, Allergy and Other Hypersensitivities in Denmark, 1987–1994.), Copenhagen, Denmark: Dansk Institut for Klinisk Epidemiologi.Google Scholar
Madsen, C (1997) Prevalence of food allergy/intolerance in Europe. Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology 4, 163167.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Osterballe, M, Hansen, TK, Mortz, CG, Høst, A &, Bindslev-Jensen, C (2004) The prevalence of food hypersensitivity in an unselected population of children and adults. PhD Thesis, Syddansk Universitet, Odense, Denmark.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osterballe, M, Hansen, TK, Mortz, CG, Bindslev-Jensen, C (2005) The clinical relevance of sensitization to pollen-related fruits and vegetables in unselected pollen-sensitized adults. Allergy 60, 218225.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Taylor, SL, Bush, RK & Nordlee, JA (1997) Sulfites Food Allergy: Adverse Reactions to Foods and Food Additives, 2nd ed. 339357 [Metcalfe, DD Sampson, HA Simon, RA, editors]. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Science.Google Scholar
Young, E, Stoneham, MD, Petruckevitch, A, Barton, J & Rona, R (1994) A population study of food intolerance. Lancet 343, 11271130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zuberbier, T, Edenharter, G, Worm, M, Ehlers, I, Reimann, S, Hantke, T, Roehr, CC, Bergmann, KE & Niggemann, B (2004) Prevalence of adverse reactions to food in Germany – a population study. Allergy 59, 338345.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed