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Advances in Dermatology and Allergology/Postępy Dermatologii i Alergologii
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Original paper

Carmine allergy in urticaria patients

Beata Sadowska
1
,
Marlena Sztormowska
1
,
Marika Gawinowska
1
,
Marta Chełmińska
1

  1. Department of Allergology, Medical University of Gdansk, Gdansk, Poland
Adv Dermatol Allergol 2022; XXXIX (1): 94-100
Online publish date: 2020/11/13
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Introduction

Carmine or less concentrated cochineal extract (E120, Natural Red 4, colour index No. 75470) is a natural red dye obtained from dried bodies of female Dactylopius coccus insects, commonly used in cosmetics, food and pharmaceutical industries [1–5]. According to the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), cochineal contains approximately 2–4% of carminic acid only, while commercial carmine used in the industry contains at least 50% of carminic acid [6]. Protein impurities coming from insects may be responsible for IgE-dependent allergic reactions and contact allergy symptoms [5, 7–10]. As neither the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) nor the EFSA has set limits on carmine protein impurities, in practice their content varies and can be as high as 25% depending on the manufacturer [9, 11, 12]. Ohgiya et al. used sera from patients with anaphylaxis and identified the 38 kD protein CC38K as the main allergen [13].
Symptoms of hypersensitivity may occur after contact with carmine as a result of its ingestion, inhalation or penetration through the skin, resulting in a wide range of reactions including erythema, urticaria, angioedema, exacerbation of atopic eczema, bronchospasm, extrinsic allergic bronchiolitis, gastrointestinal symptoms and anaphylactic shock [7, 9, 14–17]. Over 80 cases of hypersensitivity have been registered worldwide, predominantly in Japan [18].
It is considered that patients are initially sensitized through their damaged skin when cosmetics with carmine are used (the condition is mainly found in women) or through inhalation during the occupational exposure [7]. The real number of E120 hypersensitivity reactions seems to be underestimated due to the lack of standardized diagnostic methods [18].

Aim

The aim of the current study was to analyse the frequency of carmine allergy in urticaria patients suspected of being hypersensitive to food additives as revealed via in-depth interviews and questionnaires. To assess the clinical significance of sensitization in selected patients, the authors performed a carmine placebo-controlled oral study. We performed patch tests to determine the frequency of carmine contact sensitization and whether it coexists with immediate reactions because the skin can be the primary source of sensitization.

Material and methods

One hundred and ten urticaria patients, including 76 (69%) women, were hospitalized at the Allergology Department, Medical University of Gdansk, Poland, in 2017–2019. The study protocol approved by the Bioethics Committee met the ethical standards of the Helsinki Declaration. Written informed consent was obtained from the patients and patient anonymity was preserved using methods approved by the Bioethics Committee. The subjects were also asked to complete a detailed questionnaire about their current course of urticaria. All the patients were asked to stop taking antihistamines and systemic glucocorticoids in the pre-hospitalization period of 7 days and 1 month, respectively. Prior to the study, the intravenous line was placed, blood pressure was measured, and the patients with bronchial asthma underwent spirometry.
Skin prick tests (SPT) were performed for 1% carmine with positive and negative controls (histamine hydrochloride 10 mg/mL and Allergopharma saline). The 5% carmine was provided by Bart Ltd, S³upno, Poland, which was diluted with saline and glycerol at a ratio of 1 : 1 to obtain a 1% carmine solution. Multiple doses of SPT in attempt to determine the optimal concentration were performed in few patients with positive carmine oral challenge (OC) (Figure 1). The control group comprised 100 patients without urticaria, who were consulted at the outpatient clinic and had negative test results. The two largest perpendicular diameters of the wheal were measured at the 20th and 30th min to calculate the mean value of SPT reaction and were monitored for the next 5 h. The wheal diameter of minimum 3 mm that was larger than negative control with a wheal reaction of minimum 3 mm for histamine was considered positive.
Patch tests (PT) for 1% carmine on petroleum were placed in the chambers of IQ-Ultra Chambers (Chemotechnique Diagnostics, Vellinge, Sweden) on the back of the patients and kept under occlusion for 48 h, and then read after 48, 72, 96 and 168 h.
The serum level of specific IgE was measured by ImmunoCap (cochineal extract, ImmunoCap, code f340, ThermoFisher Scientific). In our study, for research purposes the value of minimum 0.01 kU/l was initially considered as a positive result, despite the fact that a value ≥ 0.35 kU/l is usually considered positive.
Patients with positive carmine SPT, f340 or with a history of suspected hypersensitivity to E120 were qualified for a single-blind, placebo-controlled oral challenge. The patients had not taken antihistamines for 7 days, were urticaria symptoms free, with their blood pressure below 140/90 mm Hg and with the forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) above 70% on the day of the test. According to the protocol, the patients were given a placebo capsule, followed by 1/2/5/10/25/50/100 and 150 mg carmine capsule. In the case of severe allergic reactions in the past, three initial doses of 0.1/0.2/0.5 mg were added at the beginning. Doses of 0.1–5 mg were used at intervals of 20 min, and the following doses were given every hour. The Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI), i.e. 5 mg/kg of body weight according to EFSA [6] was not exceeded. Adverse events were classified as objective symptoms (urticaria, angioedema, rhinitis, conjunctivitis, wheezing, coughing, vomiting, diarrhoea, and collapse) or subjective symptoms. Tests were assessed as positive, when objective allergic symptoms developed during the test, but not after the placebo administration. All the subjects were under observation for a period of at least 3 h after the last dose administration. The significance of the association of between carmine positive tests and other variables was analysed with the c2 test/Fisher’s exact test.

Results

Questionnaire

Over half (51%) of the patients qualified for the study reported in their questionnaires the occurrence of both angioedema and urticaria; isolated angioedema was reported in 16% of the subjects. Thirty-five percent of patients suffered from chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU), 65% had chronic inducible urticaria (CIndU) and 22% reported both CSU and CIndU.
The patients’ average age was 46 years (min. 20, max. 76 years). The duration of the disease was 7 years (min. 3 months, max. 58 years). Every second patient suffered from symptoms less frequently than once a month and 43% of the patients were treated in the past with parenteral glucocorticoids for an average period of 14 days (1 to 90 days) due to urticaria.
In the group under study, 65% of the patients had a history of atopy defined as positive SPT or sIgE for airborne or food allergens and 23% of the patients had asthma. Systemic symptoms defined as swelling of the tongue or extracutaneous symptoms associated with urticaria were reported by 56% of the subjects. Seven out of 10 patients were convinced that it was the food that caused the symptoms. Of the culprit foods, 32 participants listed at least one food potentially containing carmine, such as sausages, kebabs, coloured jelly beans, drops, fruit yoghurts, energy drink, pizza with salami, candied fruit, fruit tea, greengrocer’s jams and unidentified spices from the Far East.

Skin prick test – SPT

The group of patients with a positive carmine SPT, “SPT carmine (+)” group, comprised 19 individuals (17%). The wheal size increased after 30 min compared to the 20 min evaluation in all the patients. The wheal of min. 4 mm in size was observed in 10 participants. In 2 patients (no. 1 and 7), the wheal size increased to the maximum after a few hours (Figures 2 A, B). Compared with patients with a negative SPT, in the SPT carmine (+) group, atopy was usually diagnosed (90% vs. 59%, p < 0.01) and the skin manifestation of urticaria was more often accompanied by systemic symptoms (84% vs. 51%, p < 0.006). A 74-year-old man suffering from angioedema occurring more frequently than once a month, experienced tongue swelling approximately 40 min after carmine SPT was conducted. The wheal was 6 mm in size and its f340 value was 0.99 kU/l. The patient’s wife confirmed he was developing symptoms after eating red Mentos drops and sausages. This patient was withdrawn from the OC and patch testing and was included in the group of patients with diagnosed carmine hypersensitivity (“carmine hypersensitivity (+)” group).

Patch test – PT

Six patients had erythema (doubtful result) on the third and fourth day of the carmine patch test. In the patients of the SPT carmine (+) group, the test was doubtful in 16%, the figure being five times higher than that for the SPT carmine (–) group; the difference, however, did not reach any statistical significance (p < 0.063).

Specific antibody level – f340

The f340 level was measured in 52 subjects suspected of hypersensitivity to carmine, when they answered the questionnaire and also in most patients with a positive SPT and PT (Table 1). The minimum score of 0.01 kU/l was detected in 25 subjects (the “f340 carmine (+)” group), with an average value of 0.26 kU/l (the range: 0.01-3.05 kU/l); however the score of min. 0.35 kU/l was noted in 4 patients only. In the f340 carmine (+) group, carmine SPT was positive in 60% of the patients, while in the patients with negative f340 results the positive SPT was found only in 11%. The patients in the f340 carmine (+) group reported systemic symptoms more often than in the f340 carmine (–) group (84 vs. 52%, p < 0.02).
In the f340 carmine (+) group, carmine hypersensitivity was diagnosed in 37% of the patients. Within the ranges of 0.01–0.09, 0.1–0.35, and above 0.35 kU/l, the percentage of positive challeges was 22%, 43%, and 67%, respectively.

Placebo-controlled oral challenge – OC

In the selected group for challenge, 33 patients agreed to undergo carmine OC, while eight patients with SPT carmine (+) or f340 carmine (+) results were not challenged due to the lack of their consent, noncompliance or contraindications. The OC was positive in eight out of 33 subjects, whose results are described (Table 2). The extended protocol with an initial dose of 0.1 mg was performed in two patients, while the rest were initially challenged with a 1 mg dose. Allergic symptoms during the OC were observed after 2 mg in 2; 5 mg in 2; 50 mg in 1; 100 mg in 1 and after 150 mg in 2 patients. The most common skin reaction during the challenge was generalized urticaria, facial or neck erythema, angioedema and generalized pruritus. All the symptoms resolved after 1 or 2 h of treatment with 2 tablets of antihistamines and glucocorticoids if needed. Any adrenaline administration during the OC was not used. In the group diagnosed with allergy to carmine, in 5 out of 9 patients (56%) the SPT result was positive, always with the wheal size of min. 4 mm, and in 7 out of 9 patients (78%) the f340 result was min. 0.02 kU/l. In 2 patients indicating kebab and sausages as a possible culprit food, with both SPT and f340 being negative, a positive challenge was obtained. Compared to the rest of the study cohort, all the patients in the carmine hypersensitivity (+) group had a history of more common facial symptoms (100 vs. 82%, p < 0.02) and systemic symptoms (89 vs. 53%, p < 0.02).

Discussion

This is the first study on carmine hypersensitivity in Poland using skin prick tests and sIgE level measurement. Our study shows a significant number of patients with carmine allergy (8%) in urticaria cohort, all of them with CIndU, while one-third of them had coexisting CSU. This shows the complexity of urticaria and its exacerbations.
Liippo et al. studied a group of 3164 patients with suspected food hypersensitivity and obtained positive carmine SPT results in 3% of them [19]. In our patients, carmine SPT was positive in up to 17% of the subjects, what may result from the selection for the study made on the basis of the questionnaire. As confirmed by Greenhawt et al. [3, 20], the wheal size was larger after 30 min than after 20 min evaluation in all our patients, which shows that the skin reaction during carmine SPT should not be read until 30 min have passed. In patients 1 and 7 the skin reaction increased to the maximum size after 4 and 2 h, which indicates the need to observe the skin for the next few hours after the prick.
The previous studies used different carmine concentrations for skin prick tests: 0.5% [7, 14–16], 1% [21, 22] or even higher [9, 20]. By testing with different SPT concentrations, we have shown that positive results were sometimes obtained with lower carmine concentrations. However in present urticaria patients, 1% carmine gave clearly positive results, especially in the subjects with dermographism, where negative control usually caused a wheal. Kägi et al. reported patients with anaphylaxis and acute angioedema after a Campari drink, whose 0.5% carmine SPT was negative, while they were positive with carmine provided by drink manufacturers. It may only suggest that the 0.5% SPT concentration may not be sufficient in some patients [15].
In the SPT carmine (+) group, 83% of the patients had a positive f340 result, while in the f340 carmine (+) group, 60% of positive skin carmine tests were observed. Positive results for both SPT and f340 were noticed in 15 (14%) patients. In our cohort, the skin prick test was a more specific marker (63%), while the f340 was a more sensitive (78%) one, which is presented in Table 3; however the cut-off point has been set at the minimum level of 0.01 kU/l. Low carmine sIgE levels in patients with E120 allergy were reported in previous studies. Voltolini et al. determined angioedema reactions in a female patient after ingestion of meat with carmine with sIgE of 0.19 kU/l [1].
Takeo et al. have proposed an interesting diagnostic chart for patients with suspected carmine allergy [18]. In Japan, the addition of carmine to food is not allowed there albeit cochineal is permitted, while there are no restrictions on the practice of adding carmine to cosmetics. This may be the reason behind anaphylaxis being observed in patients, who have eaten food imported from Europe, what may suggest that Japanese people are ‘more sensitive’ to carmine ingestion.
These Japanese authors recommend that the positive SPT result and the medical history suggesting carmine hypersensitivity should confirm the diagnosis of carmine allergy. They further recommend that only the level of sIgE should be checked when – despite negative skin tests – a history of allergy is suspected (the condition observed in 20% of their patients) [18]. In our subject group we performed nine carmine OC in patients with negative SPT and f340 value of 0–0.09 kU/l and obtained three positive results. Patient 9, a non-atopic individual with f340 at a level of 0.02 kU/l, developed massive urticaria with dyspnoea 20 min after a 100 mg dose administration. Additionally, patients 3 and 6 with reported reactions after eating food with carmine, namely they experienced urticaria and angioedema during the challenge despite their negative SPT and f340 tests. Still, in two men whose SPT and f340 figures were 5 and 3 mm and 0.31 and 0.38 kU/l, respectively, the result of the challenge was unexpectedly negative. Accordingly, every patient with positive SPT or f340 above 0.01 kU/l may be clinically relevant and requires an oral challenge.
The wheal size of min. 4 mm (n = 10) always coexisted with a positive result of f340, yet a negative OC was obtained in this group in three subjects. It is therefore an open question whether in the case of sensitization and negative oral challenge patients should avoid carmine consumption. We would be careful to allow carmine to be consumed in this patient group. Nearly 44% of the patients with positive SPT and negative OC clearly indicated that their symptoms manifested after eating foods such as salami, other meat products, kebabs, sweets and fruit yoghurts. Although the carmine content in foods is strictly defined, in practice the recommended dose limits may be exceeded [23]. We cannot exclude that some reactions are dose-dependent or associated with other co-factors.
Liippo et al. showed that 41% of the patients with a positive carmine SPT reported symptoms after exposure to the dye [19]. In our study, as much as 58% of the patients indicated carmine food as a potential cause of symptoms, this percentage being higher than that in the carmine SPT negative group (23%, p < 0.003).
Some researchers believe that epidermal damage, e.g. to the eyelids in atopic patients does promote sensitization [4]. Our study seems to confirm this because we have found a statistical predominance of atopy in each group with positive carmine tests.
Carmine allergy is believed to be a consequence of skin exposure to carmine cosmetics [24–27]. The level of carmine concentrations has been revealed by one of the cosmetics company: 0.01–4% in lipsticks, 0.05–10% in blushes, and 0.02–20% in eye shadows [24]. Patients 2, 3, 7 and 9 were still using cosmetics with E120 (eye shadows, blushes or lipsticks). Having stopped using her eye shadow, patient 7 was free of chronic eyelid oedema she had complained about for two years, the condition that worsened during the OC. Still, patients 1, 4 and 8 had used cosmetics with carmine in the past. In our patient group, as many as seven men were positive with a minimum of one carmine test (4 SPT, 7 f340, 2 OC), but the source of E120 sensitization was not established. In all the patients with positive OC, carmine patch tests were definitely negative, so we did not find any contact allergy coexistence. Other authors showed positive carmine patch tests in children, however no oral challenge was performed [28, 29].

Conclusions

Carmine allergy in urticaria is more common than it was previously suspected, especially in patients with atopy and systemic symptoms in the course of chronic inducible urticaria. In diagnosing hypersensitivity to carmine, particular attention should be paid to reactions occurring after indigestion of fruit yoghurts, coloured sweets, kebabs and other meats. As the first allergic symptom can be anaphylaxis, it is worth considering whether avoiding carmine both in the diet and in cosmetics in E120 sensitive patients is optimal. A skin prick test and the sIgE evaluation combined with a detailed medical history focused on the culprit foods seem to be helpful diagnostic tools in determining hypersensitivity to carmine in urticaria patients.

Acknowledgments

The authors want to acknowledge Miko³aj Rybaczuk, MA for statistical analysis.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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