Abstract

Relatively few laboratory tests are of proven value in the differential diagnosis and management of allergic diseases. Immunoassays for IgE and for IgE antibodies are the mainstays. Measurement of IgE in serum is advocated as a first-order laboratory test in the differential diagnosis of allergic disease in children and adults. The usefulness of laboratory tests for IgE antibodies in serum, once a subject of debate in the clinical allergy literature, is now firmly established. Confusion, in respect to the use of these tests, is most evident in clinical situations which have been the subject of limited clinical investigation, e.g., the use of tests for IgE antibodies to screen for allergic disease, the indications for their use in patients treated with allergen immunotherapy, and the diagnostic specificity of IgE antibodies to foods as an indicator of food-induced allergic symptoms. Confusion is also apparent in the interpretation of borderline test results, i.e., results which may indicate the presence of low titers of IgE antibodies, and in defining the optimum format for reporting results to maximize the analytical sensitivity of the test method. This review addresses the ambiguities noted above in the interpretation of results. The paragraphs that follow also consider the possible uses of laboratory tests for inflammatory mediators of immediate hypersensitivity, for IgG antibodies to allergens, and of tests designed to evaluate the in vitro functions of lymphocytes in patients with allergic disease.

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