Contact: Zoe Dunford
zoe.dunford@bbsrc.ac.uk
44-016-032-55111
Norwich BioScience Institutes
Scientists developing food allergy treatment
A team of scientists from across Europe are embarking on new research to develop a treatment for food allergy.
"Food
allergy affects around 10 million EU citizens and there is no cure,"
says Dr Clare Mills of the Institute of Food Research, a lead partner
in the Food Allergy Specific Therapy (FAST) research project. "All
people with food allergy can do is avoid the foods to which they are
allergic. The threat of severe anaphylaxis has a great impact on their
quality of life."
Attempted treatment with allergen-specific
immunotherapy, where a patient received monthly injections with an
allergen extract for three to five years, failed because it could cause
anaphylaxis as a side effect.
Anaphylaxis is a severe allergic
reaction involving the whole body, often within minutes of exposure to
the allergen. Peanut allergy is the most widely known cause, but other
causes of anaphylaxis include other foods, insect stings, latex and
drugs. If untreated in time it can be fatal.
In the FAST
project, scientists will use modified variants of allergic proteins
that are hypoallergenic and therefore safer. The proteins will be
purified making them more effective and making it easier to control the
dose.
Ninety percent of all food allergies are caused by
about 10 foods. Allergies to fish and fruit are among the most common
in Europe. In fish allergy the protein responsible is parvalbumin and
in fruit it is lipid transfer protein (LTP). Modified hypo-allergenic
versions of these proteins will be produced at tested as potential
treatments.
"We are hoping for a cure that will allow people
to eat fish or fruit again," says Dr Ronald van Ree from the Academic
Medical Center at the University of Amsterdam. "But a significant
reduction of sensitivity would already be a great step forwards.
"The
risk of unintentional exposure due to cross-contamination of foods, or
while eating in restaurants or at parties, will decrease. This will
take away lot of the anxiety that has a negative impact on the quality
of life of food allergy sufferers."
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Contacts
IFR Press Office
Zoe Dunford, Tel: 01603 255111, email: zoe.dunford@bbsrc.ac.uk
Andrew Chapple, Tel: 01603 251490, email: andrew.chapple@bbsrc.ac.uk
Notes to editors
For online information on the project: http://www.allergome.org:8080/fast/index.jsp
The mission of the Institute of Food Research (www.ifr.ac.uk)
is to undertake international quality scientific research relevant to
food and human health and to work in partnership with others to provide
underpinning science for consumers, policy makers, the food industry
and academia. It is a company limited by guarantee, with charitable
status, grant aided by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
Research Council (www.bbsrc.ac.uk).
The
Academic Medical Center (AMC) is one of the foremost research
institutions of the Netherlands as well as one of the largest
hospitals. The AMC complex houses the university hospital and the
medical faculty of the University of Amsterdam, as well the Netherlands
Institute Neurosciences and, the medical department of the Royal
Tropical Institute. In the coming years, a national Neuroimaging Center
will arise next to the AMC. Also a number of biotech companies – partly
AMC spin-offs - are located on the premises. This concentration of
expertise makes the AMC a breeding ground for fruitful scientific
collaboration. The AMC houses all medical specializations that are
recognized in the Netherlands, and all types of top clinical patient
care.