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Component interpretation

Structured notes for reading allergen component results alongside clinical history, exposure, region, and risk.

Interpretation framework

A molecular result is most useful when it is interpreted as a pattern. The same positive component can mean different things depending on the patient history, exposure, age, geography, total sensitisation pattern, and the clinical question being asked.

Questions to ask before reading the report

  • What clinical problem is this test trying to solve?
  • Which allergen sources are plausible from the history?
  • Are symptoms immediate, delayed, local, systemic, seasonal, occupational, or food-related?
  • Is the patient mono-sensitised, oligo-sensitised, or broadly polysensitised?
  • Could a panallergen, CCD, or cross-reactive family explain the pattern?
1Start with the clinical question

Is the clinician investigating diagnosis, risk, cross-reactivity, dietary advice, immunotherapy suitability, or unexplained symptoms?

2Map the exposure

Consider whether the patient has meaningful exposure to the allergen source and whether symptoms occur with that exposure.

3Read component families

Look for patterns that suggest storage proteins, PR-10 proteins, profilins, LTPs, tropomyosins, CCDs, or other cross-reactive families.

4Separate sensitisation from clinical allergy

A molecular result can support reasoning, but it should not be read in isolation from history and specialist judgement.