IgE anti plant glycoproteins in pet samples. Effect on

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IgE anti plant glycoproteins in pet samples.
Effect on IgE in vitro testing.
Basis
We have observed that a significant percentage of dogs with allergic disease test IgE positive
for many, and in some cases all, of the plant pollens in our test panels. We have shown that
IgE from this subset of dogs is binding to carbohydrate allergens that are shared in common
by these pollens. We believe that the anti-carbohydrate IgE produced against the shared
carbohydrates is not relevant to the clinical disease, and that the large number of positive
reactions reported complicates the selection of proper allergens to include in
immunotherapy prescriptions.
We have developed a new test to confirm IgE reactivity to the shared carbohydrates when it
occurs, and can now modify our existing ALLERCEPT test to block this reactivity. The new
tests simplify and improve the process of selecting allergens for inclusion in immunotherapy
prescriptions by selectively eliminating the carbohydrate-reactive IgE from the sample
before testing. In the modified test, pollen positives now indicate IgE reactivity with
allergens that are more likely implicated in clinical disease.
Anti-plant carbohydrate IgE antibodies affect IgE testing
The illustration below shows the problem.
These situations will lead to a specific IgE reaction which is not clinically relevant. The result
of the IgE test cannot be interpreted.
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Technical department-20160909
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Is it possible to get a positive anti pollen IgE response in samples that possess IgE to the
shared CHO?
Yes. An specific assay has been developed to prevent binding of the anti-CHO IgE to the
allergens tested.
The use of this blocking reagent provides:
 A positive IgE test when there is IgE reactive with the unshared (unique) pollen
allergens.
 A negative test when IgE is directed only against the shared CHO.
When the presence of cross-reactive IgE against carbohydrates should ideally be assessed?
The cross-reactive IgE should be identified before an allergen panel test is performed.
The principle of the new Heska pollen CHO test
• IgE detecting system: Fc-epsilon receptor
• Allergen: Proprietary CHO allergen extract.
• Species: dog, cat and horse
CHO-test performance
On a trial performed on 500 cases from all over Europe:
•
•
•
Prevalence: 150 cases; 30%
Sensitivity: > 88%
Specificity: > 94%
What to do when the presence of cross-reactive IgE against carbohydrates is confirmed?
The ALLERCEPT testing laboratory will run a modified ALLERCEPT test which will block the IgE
reaction against carbohydrates. Three scenarios are then possible:
1. When the serum will contain IgE reactive only with the shared CHO. When this
occurs, the modified test will be negative for the pollens.
2. When the serum will contain IgE reactive with both the shared CHO and also other
relevant (unique) pollen allergens. In the modified test, the reactivity with the
shared CHO will be blocked and positives will be reported only for the more relevant
allergens.
3. When the serum will be negative for all of the pollen allergens, both the shared CHO
and the unique allergens, no positives will be reported.
Cases 1 and 2 are shown in Appendix-1
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Technical department-20160909
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APPENDIX-1
For the true negative sample (case-1):
For the true positive sample (case-2):
Heska AG
Technical department-20160909
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