A new study says 1.5 million children and adults in the United States may have a sesame allergy, making it the ninth most common allergy. But sesame isn't required to be listed on food labels.
Experimental treatment for peanut allergy increases anaphylaxis risk, study findsA new study says 1.5 million children and adults in the United States may have a sesame allergy. That's a greater number than previously estimated, and makes it the ninth most common allergy. But sesame isn't required to be listed on food labels.
But even so, the study provides evidence of the"increasing burden of sesame allergy" in the United States, according to Jennifer Protudjer and Dr. Elissa Abrams from the University of Manitoba in Canada, who wrote an editorial alongside the study. The study"supports an increasing need for diligence and awareness of the role of sesame allergy in the United States," they wrote.
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