Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 The Editors, JACI, and the Board of Directors, American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. As a long time member of the Academy, I was shocked and disappointed by the “ Position Paper†printed in the February issue of the JACI (Bush RK, et al. The medical aspects of mold exposure). A number of criticisms come quickly to mind: 1. At least two of the authors earn a substantial income testifying against patients in mold related litigation. The potential conflict of interest is not addressed. 2. This is not a position paper generated from free and open discussion among Academy members. It is a one-sided opinion paper. 3. The authors seem to be ignoring one of the basic tenets of allergy: when symptoms appear following an exposure and abate on its cessation, chances are the patient is reacting to something in that exposure. Before we label her a hypochondriac, let’s explore the details. Perhaps we can learn. 4. The authors draw conclusions about the health effects of indoor mold exposure for which they offer no positive support from the literature. The lack of evidence is not evidence against. 5. The authors have selected from the literature articles that, however tenuously, support their opinions and ignore the mountain of evidence which refutes their conclusions. c.f. Straus D, (ed). Sick Building Syndrome: Advances in applied microbiology. 55, 2004, and Johanning E. Bioaerosols, fungi, bacteria, mycotoxins and human health. Fungal Research Group Foundation, Albany, 2005. 6. Two peer-reviewed literature references that do not support the authors’ conclusions are cited and rejected as “poor quality†without discussion.1,2 7. The authors’ review of the literature involving the presence of mold specific IgG antibodies reflecting the patients’ exposure to mold is completely distorted. They seem to suggest that the measurement of mold specific IgG antibodies cannot be a useful clinical parameter in diagnosing and monitoring the progress of patients with mold related illness. 8. The conclusion that mycotoxins are not proteins and therefore mycotoxin antibodies are not possible ignores the enormous literature on penicillin reactions (a mycotoxin). One of the papers cited by the authors specifically identifies IgG antibodies against mycotoxins but is given no value in reading their conclusion.3 9. No reference is made to the very important work done by Dr. Sherris’ group, formerly of the Mayo Clinic, now at the University of Buffalo, in which mold specific IgG antibodies are identified as markers of chronic rhinosinusitis, and no difference between patients and controls is seen with IgE antibodies. 4 I am astounded that the Academy would take such a blatant stand against the best interest of patients and disburse biased opinions as facts to its membership. I believe this paper does not meet the minimal standard for a position paper by the Academy. It should be withdrawn. The Academy would de well to sponsor an open forum in which to debate the issues of health effects from mold exposure in the Journal. Sincerely Yours, A. Marinkovich, M.D. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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