eISSN: 2299-0046
ISSN: 1642-395X
Advances in Dermatology and Allergology/Postępy Dermatologii i Alergologii
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3/2017
vol. 34
 
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Letter to the Editor

Anaphylaxis by antihistamine containing bovine gelatin: the utility of the basophil activation test in the diagnostic work-up

Eleonora Nucera
,
Amira Colagiovanni
,
Simona Mezzacappa
,
Alessandro Buonomo
,
Arianna Aruanno
,
Angela Rizzi
,
Domenico Schiavino

Adv Dermatol Allergol 2017; XXXIV (3): 279-280
Online publish date: 2017/05/29
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Gelatin, a collagen protein obtained from cow and pig bones and fish skin is widely used, by the hydrolysis of collagen, in food preparations (sweets, yoghurt, etc.) and as a stabilizer in the pharmaceutical industry. In particular it could be found as an ingredient of drug capsules, plasma expanders, vaccines and plasma substitutes.
Systemic allergic reactions to gelatin-containing vaccines and drugs have been proven by anti-gelatin IgE assay [1–3] and by the Basophil Activation Test (BAT) [4].
Bovine gelatin sensitization is commonly associated with cow milk allergy and beef allergy [5].
We report the case of a 14-year-old patient affected by cow’s milk allergy, who experienced lip paraesthesia, generalized itching and dyspnoea with bronchospasm after the ingestion of lyophilised ebastine; the reaction was handled in the emergency room with intramuscular and aerosolized epinephrine, systemic corticosteroids and antihistamines.
The clinical history revealed an asthmatic reaction after polio vaccination and an egg allergy; for this reason the patient did not undergo any other immunization.
Since the information leaflet of ebastine showed the presence of gelatin as an ingredient of the lyophilised drug, we suspected a bovine gelatin hypersensitivity.
We did not perform either the skin prick test with bovine gelatine and ebastine (kindly provided by the drug manufacturer) or the oral challenge test with ebastine because the patient had previously experienced an anaphylactic reaction after the skin prick test with a commercial extract of milk.
Specific IgE (ImmunoCap Phadia, Uppsala, Sweden) to bovine gelatin and beef was detected and we also carried out the basophil activation test with gelatin and ebastine in order to exclude or confirm hypersensitivity to the antihistamine. In our patient, specific IgE for gelatin and beef result was 0.01 kU/l and 0.10 kU/l, respectively.
Peripheral whole blood samples were collected in heparinized tubes: 100 µl of whole blood was pre-incubated with 20 µl of the basophil stimulation buffer (containing IL-3). Basophils from the patient and from five healthy controls were stimulated with 100 µl of the basophil stimulation buffer as negative control (BD Pharmingen) and with 100 µl (10 µg/ml) of anti-IgE as positive control (BD Pharmingen). Then we used, as stimulants, 100 µl of bovine gelatin contained in the drug and 100 µl of ebastine. The degranulation was stopped on...


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