UK focuses on food hypersensitivity research

uk-focuses-on-food-hypersensitivity-research

The Government will continue to seek support to take forward this vital aspect to help people with food allergies and businesses supplying safe food.

The Government Chemist (GC) in the UK has recently announced that the Food Standards Agency, FSA, food hypersensitivity research prioritisation exercise paper has been published.

Food hypersensitivity (FHS), including food allergy, coeliac disease and food intolerance, is a major public health issue. The FSA sought to identify research priorities in the area of FHS by a UK-wide public consultation to identify unanswered research questions followed by a series of stakeholder workshops. This resulted in 10 priority uncertainties in evidence, from which 16 research questions were developed. These were summarised under the following five themes:

  • Communication of allergens both within the food supply chain and then to the end-consumer (ensuring trust in allergen communication)
  • The impact of socioeconomic factors on consumers with FHS
  • Drivers of severe reactions
  • Mechanism(s) underlying loss of tolerance in FHS
  • The risks posed by novel allergens/processing.

Allergen research needs that were identified included improving the reliability of analytical tests, although this was deemed outside of FSA scope.

The Government Chemist has worked hard to call attention to and address deficiencies in allergen analysis and is grateful to FSA for past support in this area. The Government Chemist will continue to seek support to take forward this vital aspect to help people with food allergies and businesses supplying safe food.

 

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