Background: Previous studies which applied machine learning on multiplex component-resolved diagnostics arrays identified clusters of allergen components which are biologically plausible and reflect the sources of allergenic proteins and their structural homogeneity. Sensitization to different clusters is associated with different clinical outcomes.
Objective: To investigate whether within different allergen component sensitization clusters, the internal within-cluster sensitization structure, including the number of c-sIgE responses and their distinct patterns, alters the risk of clinical expression of symptoms.
Methods: In a previous analysis in a population-based birth cohort, by clustering component-specific (c-s)IgEs, we derived allergen component clusters from infancy to adolescence. In the current analysis, we defined each subject's within-cluster sensitization structure which captured the total number of c-sIgE responses in each cluster and intra-cluster sensitization patterns. Associations between within-cluster sensitization patterns and clinical outcomes (asthma and rhinitis) in early-school age and adolescence were examined using logistic regression and binomial generalized additive models.
Results: Intra-cluster sensitization patterns revealed specific associations with asthma and rhinitis (both contemporaneously and longitudinally) that were previously unseen using binary sensitization to clusters. A more detailed description of the subjects' within-cluster c-sIgE responses in terms of the number of positive c-sIgEs and unique sensitization patterns added new information relevant to allergic diseases, both for diagnostic and prognostic purposes. For example, the increase in the number of within-cluster positive c-sIgEs at age 5 years was correlated with the increase in prevalence of asthma at ages 5 and 16 years, with the correlations being stronger in the prediction context (e.g. for the largest 'Broad' component cluster, contemporaneous: r = .28, p = .012; r = .22, p = .043; longitudinal: r = .36, p = .004; r = .27, p = .04).
Conclusion: Among sensitized individuals, a more detailed description of within-cluster c-sIgE responses in terms of the number of positive c-sIgE responses and distinct sensitization patterns, adds potentially important information relevant to allergic diseases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cea.14468 | DOI Listing |
Clin Exp Allergy
May 2024
Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Background: Previous studies which applied machine learning on multiplex component-resolved diagnostics arrays identified clusters of allergen components which are biologically plausible and reflect the sources of allergenic proteins and their structural homogeneity. Sensitization to different clusters is associated with different clinical outcomes.
Objective: To investigate whether within different allergen component sensitization clusters, the internal within-cluster sensitization structure, including the number of c-sIgE responses and their distinct patterns, alters the risk of clinical expression of symptoms.
J Allergy Clin Immunol
October 2020
National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Background: Allergic sensitization is associated with severe asthma, but assessment of sensitization is not recommended by most guidelines.
Objective: We hypothesized that patterns of IgE responses to multiple allergenic proteins differ between sensitized participants with mild/moderate and severe asthma.
Methods: IgE to 112 allergenic molecules (components, c-sIgE) was measured using multiplex array among 509 adults and 140 school-age and 131 preschool children with asthma/wheeze from the Unbiased BIOmarkers for the PREDiction of respiratory diseases outcomes cohort, of whom 595 had severe disease.
PLoS Med
November 2018
Section of Paediatrics, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Background: The relationship between allergic sensitisation and asthma is complex; the data about the strength of this association are conflicting. We propose that the discrepancies arise in part because allergic sensitisation may not be a single entity (as considered conventionally) but a collection of several different classes of sensitisation. We hypothesise that pairings between immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies to individual allergenic molecules (components), rather than IgE responses to 'informative' molecules, are associated with increased risk of asthma.
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