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Latex allergy: towards immunotherapy for health care workers

journal contribution
posted on 2002-05-01, 00:00 authored by M F Sutherland, Cenk SuphiogluCenk Suphioglu, J M Rolland, R E O'Hehir
Latex allergy is an important allergic disease for which safe and readily available immunotherapy is currently lacking. Despite advances in latex glove technology and reduction in allergen content, there remains a core of severely allergic health care workers (HCW), particularly with concominant food allergy, for whom allergen avoidance is insufficient. Current experience with immunotherapy using crude latex extracts has shown an unacceptable level of local and systemic side-effects. Latex allergens are extremely potent with a heightened capacity to cross-link effector cell-bound IgE and induce anaphylaxis. The predominant pattern of allergen reactivity among HCW is different from that among children with spina bifida, perhaps due to exposure to latex glove proteins, particularly via inhalation, rather than particle bound latex proteins present in urinary catheters. Recent studies using purified skin testing reagents have indicated that the most clinically important latex allergens amongst HCW are Hev b 5, 6 and 7. Elucidation of the molecular and cellular mechanisms of the immune response to these allergens is pivotal to facilitate the search for safer immunotherapy of latex allergy among HCW.

History

Journal

Clinical and experimental allergy

Volume

32

Issue

5

Pagination

667 - 673

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0954-7894

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002, John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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