The Hidden Danger of Meat Alternatives: How Common Plant-Based Proteins May Trigger Allergies

Peanut Allergy No Peanuts Concept

A study at the University Medical Center Utrecht found that many legume-allergic patients produce antibodies against more than one legume, indicating a high co-sensitization rate. However, clinical data shows that only a small portion of these patients exhibit actual symptoms, suggesting that while cross-reactivity exists, it may not always lead to clinically relevant co-allergies.

Researchers have discovered that individuals with allergies to soy and peanuts may also react to meat substitutes made from other legumes, however, don’t worry too much, as most individuals will not have a reaction.

With an increasing number of people looking to cut down on meat consumption, legume-based protein substitutes are gaining popularity due to their high protein, vitamin, and fiber content. However, allergies to legumes such as soy and peanuts are both widespread and potentially life-threatening. Dr. Mark Smits and a group of researchers at University Medical Center Utrecht aim to answer the question: are individuals with legume allergies at risk from consuming meat-free protein sources made from different legumes?

“Both protein consumption and the world’s population are increasing which leads to an urgent demand for sustainable protein sources,” said Dr Thuy-My Le, senior author of the study published in Frontiers in Allergy. “An increase in the consumption of legumes may increase the number of allergies to these foods. Furthermore, these new legumes may elicit allergic complaints in already legume-allergic patients. Therefore, we investigated how often sensitization and allergy to different legumes occurs in these patients.”

An allergy by any other name

People develop food allergies when their immune systems confuse food proteins with a threat and produce Immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies. Sensitized individuals can, upon re-exposure to the same food, develop symptoms of an allergy. Patients that react to one food may also react to another: this is a co-allergy. Co-allergies are accompanied by co-sensitization, in which patients produce IgE antibodies against several foods. Co-sensitization may be caused by cross-reactivity, where IgE antibodies bind to proteins from multiple foods because the proteins share similar structures.

Co-sensitization can lead to a diagnosed co-allergy, but doesn’t always: it’s possible for someone to be co-sensitized to a food, but not experience a reaction when they eat it. So, do patients with specific legume allergies react to other legumes?

Smits and colleagues recruited legume-allergic patients from the Allergology Clinic at the University Medical Center Utrecht and split them into six groups according to allergies: peanuts, soybeans, green peas, lupines, lentils, and beans. All patients had allergies validated by an oral food challenge or a positive IgE test combined with a history of reactions. Each different group was tested for IgE antibodies against the other legumes.

“We showed that a large number of patients produced antibodies against more than one legume,” said Dr. Kitty Verhoeckx, second author of the study. “However, clinical data showed that only a small part of these patients had actual symptoms.”

High co-sensitization rate between legumes, but not always co-allergy

All six patient groups showed co-sensitization to additional legumes, and almost a quarter of patients were sensitized to all legumes. Nearly all the patients in the bean allergy group were sensitized to other legumes. Patients allergic to green peas, lupines, or lentils were also likely to be sensitized to other legumes, while patients with diagnosed allergies to peanuts or soybeans were not.

The team also looked at which of these patients had documented co-allergies for several legumes. The high co-sensitization rate was associated with clinical symptoms in only a relatively small number of patients. In peanut and soybean-allergic patients, co-allergies for green pea, lupine, lentil, and bean were uncommon, but patients who had allergies to this second group of legumes were likely to be co-allergic to peanuts or soybeans. Patients with peanut allergies were also often co-allergic to soybeans, and vice versa. Co-sensitization for peanuts was associated with clinically relevant co-allergy in almost all the other legume groups. However, the team cautioned that it will be necessary to expand the study to a larger group and confirm co-allergies with oral food challenges to determine how clinically relevant this co-sensitization is in practice.

“Legumes are an attractive sustainable protein source, but allergic reactions in the already legume-allergic population cannot be excluded as antibodies in the blood of legume-allergic patients frequently react to different legumes,” said Le. “However, this reaction does not always lead to a clinically relevant food allergy. Introduction of novel foods into the market should be accompanied by an appropriate assessment of the risk of developing (new) food allergies.”

Reference: “Co-sensitization between legumes is frequently seen, but variable and not always clinically relevant” by Mark Smits, Kitty Verhoeckx, André Knulst, Paco Welsing, Aard de Jong, Marco Gaspari, Anna Ehlers, Paulien Verhoeff, Geert Houben and Thuy-My Le, 16 March 2023, Frontiers in Allergy.
DOI: 10.3389/falgy.2023.1115022

The study was funded by the Strategic Research Council.

1 Comment on "The Hidden Danger of Meat Alternatives: How Common Plant-Based Proteins May Trigger Allergies"

  1. I feel sorry for all the people who fall for the meat is bad scam.

    Common sense and 50000+ years of history should be enough for anyone to realize humans are meant to eat meat and natural single ingredient made by nature is far better than some super processed, chemical ridden attempt to make a fake version of meat.

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