HATFIELD, Pa., June 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- AllerGenis, a
predictive data analytics company specializing in the detection and
management of life-threatening immune response disorders including
food allergy, announced the publication of a peer-reviewed
study entitled, "Accurate and Reproducible Diagnosis of Peanut
Allergy Using Epitope Mapping." Conducted by leading global experts
in pediatric allergy and immunology from the Icahn School of
Medicine at Mount Sinai, Stanford
University and Kings College, the study found the
AllerGenis peanut diagnostic blood test demonstrates accuracy
significantly and statistically superior to all other established
diagnostic tests. The AllerGenis peanut allergy diagnostic, which
relies on analyzing a small amount of blood, resulted in 93%
accuracy rate as compared to an oral food challenge without the
risk of triggering an allergic reaction. The study is published in
the prestigious global impact journal Allergy, the official
journal of the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
(EAACI).
"...this test brings us one step closer to eliminating the need to
subject patients to an oral food challenge."
The findings are life-changing for food allergy patients who
previously turned to a potentially risky and often
anxiety-producing procedure called an oral food challenge (OFC) to
rule out a food allergy. OFC requires patients to eat the
suspected allergy-triggering food. Since there is a risk of a
life-threatening allergic reaction and the frequent reluctance from
the patient/caregiver in addition to anxiety, OFCs are often
difficult to perform or even avoided altogether. A new, risk-free
and non-invasive blood test is a major breakthrough for allergy
patients, their families, caregivers and providers.
"An oral food challenge is one of the most stressful experiences
a parent and child can face when dealing with a food allergy," said
Beejal Huff, parent to 15-year-old
Isabelle. "We once had to stop an oral food challenge when my
daughter, Isabelle, had an allergic reaction to the peanuts she was
being given during the test. Years later we had an opportunity to
try AllerGenis' peanut allergy test, which confirmed it was highly
unlikely Isabelle still had a peanut allergy. With this information
in hand, we more comfortably proceeded with another oral food
challenge. The results of the oral food challenge also confirmed
what we had hoped was true – Isabelle was no longer allergic to
peanuts. This news has been life-changing for all of us."
"Everyone dealing with food allergies would love to have a
simple blood test that can replace the oral food challenge, which
remains the 'gold standard' for diagnosing a food allergy but which
is very time intensive and carries the risk of inducing
anaphylaxis," said Hugh Sampson, MD,
former director of the Elliot and Roslyn Jaffe Food Allergy
Institute, Kurt Hirschhorn Professor of Pediatrics at the Icahn
School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and lead author of the study.
"The accuracy of this test brings us one step closer to eliminating
the need to subject patients to an oral food challenge to diagnose
peanut allergy."
According to Dr. David Fitzhugh,
a board-certified physician specializing in internal medicine and
adult and pediatric immunology/allergy, "The company's
new technology gives me confidence as an allergist that
I'm able to offer a lab test that is highly predictive to the
results I would see with an actual oral food challenge. I can see
the AllerGenis test preventing failed challenges during which
patients would have likely experienced an allergic reaction. I
expect there will be a lot less anxiety and distress for
caregivers, parents and their children as a result."
In addition, AllerGenis has recently validated a second test, a
peanut sensitivity assay, which will determine the amount of peanut
protein that would likely cause an allergic reaction when eaten.
This assay is designed to help parents, caregivers and patients
safely navigate food labeling and day-to-day life while living
confidently with peanut allergy. The company is presenting these
findings at the Institute for the Advancement of Food and Nutrition
Sciences Annual Meeting June 16, 2021.
About AllerGenis
AllerGenis utilizes predictive data analytics for the detection and
management of life-threatening immune response disorders. Amassing
the world's largest database of phenotypic patient data derived
from epitope mapping, clinical history and patient-reported
outcomes to gain clinical insights, AllerGenis is leading the field
in developing precision, data-driven diagnostics to help healthcare
providers more accurately and safely diagnose, assess and monitor
patients with food allergies. The company was founded via a
collaboration with Hugh Sampson MD,
of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Mount Sinai Health
System has licensed its proprietary epitope mapping platform to
AllerGenis. For more information about AllerGenis, visit
www.allergenis.com and follow the company on LinkedIn, Twitter and
Facebook.
View original content to download
multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/new-life-changing-test-for-patients-diagnosed-with-peanut-allergy-301312067.html
SOURCE AllerGenis