IgE levels in cord blood and at 4–5 days of age: relation to clinical symptoms of atopic disease up to 18 months of age

Abstract
To evaluate the variation in sertim IgE levels during the neonatal period and its relation to the development of atopy, 83 infants with a heredity of atopy were studied with regard to the concentration of IgE in cord blood (CB) and capillary blood on the fourth or fifth day of life. During the neonatal period, the average IgE level remained unchanged in the whole group but there were large individual changes. Among 22 infants with CB-IgE levels 0.9 kU/l the IgE concentrations in 50% decreased below this value on days 4–5. The correlation between maternal IgE and CB-IgE concentrations (rs=0.41; P<0.001) was interpreted as indicating a probable contamination with maternal blood. This view was supported by the presence of an elevated IgA level and of IgE antibodies against inhalant allergens in 16% of the cord blood samples of which 69% had an IgE level exceeding 0.9 kU/l. It therefore seems preferable to collect the blood samples on the fourth or fifth day. However, in the 74 infants available for atopic classification at 18 months of age, the positive predictive value of IgE determinations was low: on days 4–5 25–38% and in CB 42%. A high CB-IgE level may merely be an indication of the mother's atopic state.