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Antibiotic Allergy Rahul Mukherjee Consultant Physician, Milton Keynes Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Honorary Lecturer in Medicine, University of Leeds Visiting Professor, University of Delhi Objectives To understand the background why antibiotic allergies are relevant today The size of the problem The nature of the problem Some simple remedies Why bother? The development of antimicrobial guidelines is one way in which institutions attempt to control emerging resistance The real challenge falls on promoting and ensuring adherence to these guidelines Investigating reasons for the prescribing of alternative antimicrobial agents outside of these guidelines is crucial for modifying practices that may adversely impact institutional antimicrobial goals Why bother? Clinicians frequently withhold antibiotics (particularly the penicillins) based on patients' self-reported clinical history of an adverse reaction to penicillin and the clinicians' own misunderstandings about the characteristics of a true penicillin allergy (Alan R. Salkind, Paul G. Cuddy, John W. Foxworth JAMA. 2001;285:2498-2505.) Why bother? For example: The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC, Atlanta) recommend vancomycin use in instances of penicillin allergy by suggesting its appropriateness only when patients have a serious or life-threatening allergy to beta-lactam antibiotics Many studies have established prior vancomycin use as a risk factor for colonization and infection with vancomycin-resistant enterococci BUT Vancomycin remains the commonest drug for patients giving a non-specific history of “penicillin allergy” Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee. Recommendations for preventing the spread of vancomycin resistance [review]. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1995;16:105-113. [published correction appears in Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1995;16:498]. Why bother? This contributes to Withholding of appropriate antibiotic treatment in lifethreatening situations Emergence of resistant strains Healthcare-associated infections Rising drug costs Why bother? Withholding of appropriate antibiotic treatment in life-threatening situations E.g. GP withholding penicillin in a patient with suspected bacterial meningitis, pregnant woman requiring treatment for syphilis Why bother? Emergence of resistant strains Healthcare-associated infections Rising drug costs Hospital-acquired infections add an estimated $4.5 billion per year to health care costs in the United States While not all such infections can be eliminated, about one third could be prevented by infection control measures and more prudent use of antimicrobial agents (JAMA. 1998;279:1055-1056.) Dr Ragunathan, Consultant Microbiologist to speak Why bother? The Precautionary Principle “it is better to be roughly right in due time, bearing in mind the consequences of being very wrong, than to be precisely right too late” (Norwegian Research Council for Science and the Humanities (NAVF), 1990) The size of the problem: some ideas Arch Intern Med, Oct 2000; 160: 2819 - 2822. Arch Intern Med, Oct 2000; 160: 2819 - 2822. The nature of the problem: some ideas Is This Patient Allergic to Penicillin? An Evidence-Based Analysis of the Likelihood of Penicillin Allergy. Alan R. Salkind, Paul G. Cuddy, John W. Foxworth. JAMA. 2001;285:2498-2505. Objectives To determine the likelihood of true penicillin allergy with consideration of clinical history and to evaluate the diagnostic value added by appropriate skin testing. Data Sources MEDLINE was searched for relevant English-language articles dated 1966 to October 2000. Is This Patient Allergic to Penicillin? Data Synthesis Patients' self-reported history has low accuracy for diagnosis of true penicillin allergy. Conclusions Only 10% to 20% of patients reporting a history of penicillin allergy are truly allergic when assessed by skin testing Taking a detailed history of a patient's reaction to penicillin may allow clinicians to exclude true penicillin allergy, allowing these patients to receive penicillin Patients with a concerning history of type I penicillin allergy who have a compelling need for a drug containing penicillin should undergo skin testing. Virtually all patients with a negative skin test result can take penicillin without serious sequelae. Antibiotic hypersensitivities Immediate (<1hour) Anaphylaxis (hives, laryngeal oedema, wheezing, hypotension) IgE-mediated much more likely with parenteral administration, rare (1 in 50000 to 100000 penicillin treatment courses) more serious Antibiotic hypersensitivities Non-immediate (>1 hour) particularly maculopapular and urticarial eruptions often in association with intercurrent infection are common during beta-lactam treatment mechanisms involved are heterogeneous type-IV (cell-mediated) pathogenic mechanism may be involved in some non-immediate reactions such as maculopapular or bullous rashes and acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis. Antibiotic hypersensitivities: Gell & Coombs Classification Gell PGH, Coombs RRA, Hachmann PJ, eds. Clinical Aspects of Immunology. Oxford, England: Blackwell Scientific Publications; 1975:761-781. Antibiotic hypersensitivities: special situations Immune hyper-responsiveness (e.g. Cystic Fibrosis) Decreased Glutathione levels (e.g. HIV infection) Altered Pharmacokinetics (e.g. HIV infection) Immune modulation (e.g. Infectious mononucleosis) Antibiotic hypersensitivities: Distinguishing immune- and non-immune mediated reactions Antibiotic hypersensitivities: Temporal course While we do not want to minimize the potential importance of the presence of a medication allergy, the data shows that immediate hypersensitivity reactions to penicillin and betalactam antibiotics decrease with time Among a group of 825 patients allergic to penicillin, only 146 (18%) had current evidence for immediate cutaneous reactivity to major and minor determinants. Use of penicillin skin testing to detect antipenicillin IgE antibodies, which cause anaphylaxis, urticaria, and other acute reactions, would potentially reduce the overall number of patients requiring alternative therapy to a very small % Sogn DD, Evans III R, Shepherd G, et al. Results of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Collaborative Clinical Trial to test the predictive value of skin testing with major and minor penicillin derivatives in hospitalized adults. Arch Intern Med. 1992;152:1025-1032 So, the history-taking for antibiotic allergy must include When & why the medication was taken (e.g. at what age) When symptoms began (interval between administration and adverse reaction) How long the symptoms lasted A description of the symptoms Any other medications taken during this time, including over-the-counter drugs Any concurrent infections/illnesses Some remedies Indications for referral to a physician with interest in allergy/clinical immunologist Anaphylaxis without an obvious or previously defined trigger History of penicillin allergy and likely need for antibiotics in the future History of penicillin allergy and an infection with limited options History of multiple drug allergies or intolerance Allergy to protein based bio-therapeutics History of an adverse reaction to an NSAID Requirement of chemotherapy medication for cancer with h/o prior hypersensitivity reaction to those medications History of possible allergic reactions to local anaesthetics HIV-infected patients with a history of adverse reactions to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TM-S) and need this therapy