Clinical Utility

What is the role of the ImmunoCAP Specific IgE blood test in diagnosing and managing common illnesses?
Clinical presentations may overlap between allergic and non-allergic illnesses, so a differential diagnosis of the underlying cause is important to guide medical management of common childhood illnesses and respiratory diseases. Accurate determination of etiology is difficult to establish with an empirical assessment. When used alone, history and physical diagnose allergic disease only about 50% of the time.1 Further inquiry is often necessary to provide an evidence-based diagnosis and treatment regimen. Depending on symptom presentation, most patients can be effectively tested with a single profile of allergens.

Why should I incorporate this test into my practice?
If you treat children in primary care:
In your daily practice, you see young patients with conditions such as eczema, colic, otitis media, and rhinitis. As you may know, these and other illnesses can be caused by allergy. In many cases, the appearance of such illnesses signals a cascade toward asthma, also called the Allergy March. In this Allergy March, symptoms may manifest from food or inhalant sensitivities and cause a progression of diseases from atopic dermatitis and gastrointestinal complaints to recurrent ear infections, allergic rhinitis, and ultimately asthma.2 In fact, approximately 40% of infants with atopic dermatitis may develop asthma by the age of 3 to 4 years.3 The standard of care requires identifying the true cause of the symptoms, because effective management of childhood allergies holds significance not only for immediate symptom relief, but also for long-term health.1 ImmunoCAP Specific IgE blood testing provides quantitative evidence that clearly demonstrates the appropriateness and value of your patient’s treatment plan. The right treatment decisions, based on clinical evidence, mean appropriate use of antibiotics, antihistamines, and intranasal steroids, fewer repeat office visits, and fewer unnecessary referrals.4

Click here to learn more about childhood diseases.

If you treat adults in primary care:
You routinely see patients who present with allergic rhinitis, sinusitis, and non-allergic rhinitis. The source of their symptoms may be viral, bacterial, or allergic, making definitive diagnosis an essential step in determining appropriate treatment. More than a nuisance, these conditions affect tens of millions of Americans, have a significant impact on quality of life, and result in billions of dollars in direct and indirect costs.5 Allergy awareness among the general population is at an all-time high, and patients and clinicians want to get to the cause of respiratory distress. ImmunoCAP provides quantitative evidence that clearly demonstrates the appropriateness and value of your patient’s treatment plan. The right treatment decisions, based on clinical evidence, mean appropriate use of antibiotics, antihistamines, and intranasal steroids, fewer repeat office visits, and fewer unnecessary referrals.4

Click here to learn more about upper respiratory diseases.

If you treat patients with asthma:
In asthma, allergies often play a central role in disease onset and severity.6 Some 60% of adult asthmatics have allergic asthma,6,7 and 90% of children with asthma also have allergies.8 In the management of asthma, trigger identification and control is the primary step, as specified in expert guidelines from the National Institutes of Health and the American Academy of Family Physicians.9,10  ImmunoCAP testing provides quantitative evidence to help you rule atopy in or out and, with a positive result, can identify specific allergic triggers for avoidance counseling.

Click here to learn more about lower respiratory diseases.

Who should be tested?
In children:
While a child presenting with allergy-like symptoms is a candidate for specific IgE testing, it is not likely that every child with a rash or runny nose needs the test. ImmunoCAP Specific IgE blood testing should be strongly considered for all children with allergy-like symptoms deemed to be persistent, recurrent, or severe, or for those in need of continuous treatment for a particular illness.11

In adults:
While anyone presenting with nasal or other allergy-like symptoms is a candidate for specific IgE testing, it is not likely that everyone with a runny nose needs the test. ImmunoCAP Specific IgE blood testing should be strongly considered for patients with

  • Recurrent or chronic URD symptoms, ie, nasal congestion, rhinorrhea, increased secretions12
  • Exogenous asthma and other conditions in which IgE mediation is suspected9,10

For more information, you may order these articles:

What are the specimen requirements?
40 microliters + dead volume is needed per allergen, so 1 serum separator tube or spun barrier tube (red top) is required for a panel of allergens. EDTA plasma may also be used (ImmunoCAP Specific IgE procedure). Specimens should ship at room temperature and they can be stored at 2°-8°C for up to 1 week.
Please contact your laboratory to determine the exact quantity of sample they require per test.

At what age can a patient be tested?
This test may be run on patients 3 months of age or older.

Do patients need to stop taking medications in order to be tested?
No. The ImmunoCAP Specific IgE blood test quantitatively measures immunoglobulin E. Unlike skin testing, the assay is not influenced by medications.

How often should a patient with allergies be tested with ImmunoCAP?
Symptoms determine whether a patient should be re-tested. However, sensitivity in children can change over time,1-3 so repeated testing may be indicated to assess the progression of the allergic sensitivities.13

Can I order an ImmunoCAP test for a single allergen?
Yes, but you may not get the whole allergic picture. Patients are often sensitized to more than one allergen,14 so a pre-selected profile will help you to detect the full range of possible sensitivities. Also, allergy is a cumulative threshold disease.13 Symptoms of atopic illness are often triggered only after exposure to multiple allergens. The patient who is sensitized to more than one allergen crosses the symptomatic threshold only after a cumulative allergic load has been reached.13

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