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THINK YOU ARE ALLERGIC TO PENICILLIN? MAYBE NOT Ivan Cardona, MD Allergy & Asthma Assoc. of Maine QUESTION Up to 10% of patients report a history of “Penicillin allergy.” What % of these patients truly have an IgE-mediated reaction to penicillin? A) B) C) D) 2% 10% 25% 50% ANSWER Up to 10% of patients are labeled as “Penicillin allergic.” What % of these patients truly has an IgE-mediated reaction to penicillin? A) 2% B) 10% In other words 9 out of 10 who report PCN allergy are not truly allergic C) 25% D) 50% RELEVANCE We see many patients (~10%) who have PCN allergy (or think they do!) Beta-lactams account for >50% of ADR It is important to know how to appropriately evaluate for PCN allergy (.03% anaphylactic) Rate of anaphylaxis to IV PCN 1-2/10000 patients Patients labeled PCN allergy get alternative antibiotics that may be less effective, more toxic, more expensive, and contribute to development of drug resistant bacteria (e.g. Vanc-Res-Enterococcus, C. Difficile diarrhea) WHY OVER-REPORTING OF PCN ALLERGY? Symptom confusion: Symptoms may be caused by underlying illness Drug to drug interactions Antibiotic side-effects Poor recollection of previous reaction from years ago Assumption by patient or provider that PCN allergy was inherited from a parent with PCN allergy PCN allergy diminishes or resolves after several years have passed in many patients 50% lose their sensitivity at 5 years 80% lose their sensitivity at 10 years DANGERS/COSTS OF PCN ALLERGY LABEL Retrospective matched cohort study of 51,582 “Penicillin Allergic” patients hospitalized in Kaiser Foundation South California Hospitals 2010 -2012 Longer hospital stays (.59 day/person) Treated with more fluoroquinolones, clindamycin, and vancomycin 23.4% more C difficile 14% more MRSA 30% more vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus $20 Million increase cost/year for this group of patients Macy E, Contreras R. JACI. 2014;133(3):790-6 OBJECTIVES Learn how to classify adverse drug reactions and drug allergies Discuss the essential questions in the history to evaluate for drug allergy Review the diagnostic tools and management for suspected penicillin allergy RECOMMENDED READ 2010 Primer on Allergic and Immunologic Diseases Khan DA, Solensky R. Drug allergy. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2010;125:S126:37. ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS Noxious, unintended, undesired reaction to drug Type A (Predictable) Reactions – 80% Dose-dependent, related to pharmacologic properties of drug, can occur in any individual Overdose: Hepatic failure with acetaminophen Side effects: Gastritis with NSAIDs Drug interactions: Bleeding with concurrent erythromycin, warfarin ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS Type B (Unpredictable) Reactions Dose-independent, unrelated to pharmacologic properties of drug, occurs in susceptible pts only Intolerance: Psychologic disturbance while on steroids Idiosyncracy: Hemolytic anemia with sulfa drugs in patient with G6PD deficiency Pseudoallergy/Anaphylactoid reaction: Urticaria with radiocontrast material, vancomycin, opiates Drug Allergy: Urticaria with penicillin (Immunologically mediated response) MECHANISM OF DRUG ALLERGY Most drugs not reactive in native state Must be converted (via enzymes or spontaneous degradation – like PCN) to reactive intermediates Identity of many drug intermediates not known no accurate diagnostic test Most drugs are too small to elicit immune response independently Haptenation: drug (hapten) binds to carrier protein to become immunogenic HAPTENATION • PCN is immunologically inert, but haptenates form reactive intermediates DRUG ALLERGY: IMMUNOLOGICALLY-MEDIATED ADR’S Type I IgE Ag Y YY Y Urticaria Angioedema Anaphylaxis Mast Cell & Basophil b-lactams Type III Vasculitis Serum sickness: -Urticaria -Arthralgias -Fever Y Y IgG or IgM on circulating Ags with IC deposited postcap venules ATG Infliximab Type II Ag IgG or IgM on cell surface Ags with subsequent IC Y Y Type IV DTH Hemolytic anemia Thrombocyt. Neutropenia Quinidine Exanthems Contact dermatitis SJS/TEN DRESS APC Penicillin, Sulfas T cell Neomycin Anticonvulsants QUESTION In evaluation of a patient with drug allergies, which of the following is generally the best tool to help guide management? A) B) C) D) E) Skin testing In vitro testing (drug-specific serum IgE) Detailed history Gel and Coombs classification Physical exam findings ANSWER In evaluation of a patient with drug allergies, which of the following is generally the best tool to help guide management? A) B) C) D) E) Skin testing In vitro testing (drug-specific serum IgE) Detailed history Gel and Coombs classification Physical exam findings DRUG ALLERGY EVALUATION HISTORY IS KEY!!! How long ago did the reaction occur? PCN-specific IgE Abs can wane over time with avoidance (eg, 80% of PCN allergic pts will be negative in 10 yrs) Which systems (eg, cutaneous, respiratory, GI) were involved in rxn, and what were the characteristics? Joint pain e.g. may suggest serum sickness When during the course did the rxn occur – during/after? Why was the medication prescribed? Sx of underlying disease may be misattributed to drug (eg, scarlatina—Scarlet Fever rash) DRUG ALLERGY EVALUATION HISTORY IS KEY!!! What were the symptoms involved in the reaction? E.g. scaling/peeling/vesicles/bullae typically not IgE-mediated Were you taking concurrent medications at time of rxn? Abx usually blamed but opiates/NSAIDs could be culprits What was the therapeutic management required for rxn? Suggests severity of reaction Had you taken the same drug previously? Type I rxns require sensitization DRUG ALLERGY EVALUATION HISTORY IS KEY!!! Have you taken the same or similar med since? Have you experienced sx similar to rxn in absence of drug? eg, Chronic recurrent idiopathic urticaria can be confused for drug allergy Did you have an underlying condition ( eg, viral illness) that favors rxns to certain drugs? eg, EBV/Mononucleosis for aminopenicillin rxns DIAGNOSTIC TOOLS & MANAGEMENT OF PCN ALLERGY QUESTION A reliable and valid test to determine an IgE mediated reaction exists for which of the following drug(s)? A) B) C) D) E) Cephalosporins Penicillins Sulfonamides All of the above None of the above ANSWER A reliable and valid test to determine an IgE mediated reaction exists for which of the following drug(s)? A) Cephalosporins B) Penicillins Because we know the reactive intermediates C) Sulfonamides D) All of the above E) None of the above IMMUNOCHEMISTRY OF PENICILLIN DIAGNOSTIC TESTING In fact can ONLY test for IgE-mediated rxns And reliably ONLY FOR PCN IgE-mediated rxns Skin tests 1) Skin prick test 2) Intradermal test Useful only if positive (exception: penicillin) In vitro assays 3) Serum IgE (RAST, ImmunoCAP) Unclear sensitivity/specificity QUESTION Which of the following is true regarding penicillin allergy? A) History is adequate for diagnosis B) Skin testing has high negative predictive value C) Cross-reactivity with cephalosporins is high D) Resensitization is common ANSWER Which of the following is true regarding penicillin allergy? A) History is adequate for diagnosis B) Skin testing has high negative predictive value C) Cross-reactivity with cephalosporins is high D) Resensitization is common PENICILLIN SKIN TESTING Penicillin G (as a surrogate for MDM) Pre Pen (Penicilloyl – Major Antigenic Determinant) Minor Determinant Mixture (Penicilloate, Penilloate) MDM not available in US Omitting from skin testing may fail to detect 1-2% High Negative Predictive Value (~99%) [PPV~50%] 10-20% PCN allergic are skin test (+) only to MDM If skin test (-) Oral Challenge Serum IgE testing: 97-100% spec; but 45% sensitivity So can R/I but cannot R/O; Not available for MDM Resensitization rare if tolerated PCN after skin ( -) WHO SHOULD BE PCN-ALLERGY TESTED? Patients with ambiguous or unclear h/o PCN allergy Patients with vague history of rxn >10 yrs ago Patient claiming a “family history” of PCN allergy Pre-op screening of patients with PCN allergy label: Mayo Clinic Cleveland Clinic Mayo Hospital Jacksonville, Florida San Diego Kaiser Clinic (inpatient testing) Univ. of Pennsylvania Hospital (pre-transplant program) Northwestern Memorial Hospital (pre-transplant program) Mercy and Maine Medical Center (perhaps near future??) 1.Macy,E. JACI in practice 2013;1:258-63 2.Gerace, K. Abstract 366. AAAAI 2015 Annual meeting CONTRAINDICATIONS FOR PCN TESTING Contraindications History of severe skin reactions, such as SJS, TEN, DRESS, Exfoliative dermatitis, Bullous pemphigoid, Pemphigus vulgaris, Drug-induced Lupus, etc, Organ specific drug reactions like Hemolytic anemia, Cytopenia, Nephritis, Hepatitis, Pneumonia Serum sickness, Drug-induced vasculitis Reported anaphylaxis within the last 5 years Antihistamines should be held in previous 48-72 hrs TESTING AGENTS PRP : PRE-PEN Major determinant 90% sensitivity PG : PenG (diluted 10,000 units/mL) Minor determinant Increase test to 98% sensitivity + : Histamine (positive control) - : Saline (negative control) TESTING PROCEDURE STEP 1: PRICK/PUNCTURE TESTING Positive = 3mm or larger than the negative control Wait 15-20 minutes to read results. Measure & Record. Both PRE-PEN and PenG are negative so proceed to intradermals. _ + PRP Actual Patient Results photo PG TESTING PROCEDURE STEP 2: INTRADERMAL TESTING • • Create bleb 2-3 mm under skin (similar to PPD) Circle the perimeter of the bleb Wait 15-20 minutes to read results. Measure & Record. Positive = Original bleb has GROWN 3mm or larger TESTING PROCEDURE STEP 3: ORAL CHALLENGE Final step to ensure patient/provider confidence Administer an initial dose of 1/10 of the therapeutic dose of Amoxicillin Observe for 30 min. If no reaction, then a full dose of Amoxicillin is given Patient observed for one hour ACAAI Drug and Anaphylaxis Committee Expert Opinion 2015 CEPHALOSPORINS 2-3% of penicillin skin test (+) pts will react to cephalosporins Older studies indicated 10% of pts with PCN allergy would react to cephalosporin Prior to 1980 cephalosporins were contaminated by PCN Partially responsible for the 1 st and 2 nd generation cephalosporin package inserts that state “up to 10% cross reactivity” to cephalosporins in PCN-allergic pts (NOT TRUE TODAY) Solensky R. et al. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2010; 105:259-73 Solensky, R (2015). Penicillin-allergic patients: Use of cephalosporins, carbapenems, and monobactams. In D.S. Basow (Ed.), UpToDate. Retrieved from http://www.uptodate.com/home/index.html. CEPHALOSPORINS CASE: Pt with history of penicillin allergy requiring cephalosporin B/c up to 3% will react to cephalosporins (some with anaphylaxis) PCN allergy testing recommended Penicillin skin test (–) Give cephalosporin (+) Give cephalosporin (with different R-group) via Graded Challenge So PCN skin testing should be considered before giving a cephalosporin in patients with h/o PCN allergy If history inconsistent with IgE-mediated rxn or no penicillin skin test available Graded Challenge R-CHAINS/R-GROUPS With a reported cephalosporin allergy, testing and oral challenge should be with a cephalosporin that does not share the same R -chain OTHER BETA LACTAMS Monobactam (e.g. Aztreonam) Does NOT cross react with PCNs or Cephalosporins (except Ceftazidime -same R-group) and may be given without PCN skin testing Carbepenems (e.g. Imipenem, Meropenem) Behave like cephalosporins (i.e. low cxr with PCN) So PCN testing recommended or do a graded challenge Beta Lactamase Inhibitors (e.g. Clavulanate, Sulbactam, tazobactam) Little or no data on allergenicity QUESTION So what if the patient truly has a PCN allergy (e.g. good history and/or positive PCN testing) and actually needs PCN and there are no alternative agents (e.g. Syphilis)? Drug Desensitization (usually in the ICU) Induction of temporary tolerance Must continue tx to remain desensitized Does not prevent non-IgE-mediated rxns (eg, SJS, DRESS) Start at ~1/10,000 of full dose double dose q15 min MANAGEMENT Type I Skin testing and oral challenge (if ? PCN allergy) Avoidance Drug Desensitization Types II, III Avoidance Type IV If cutaneous exanthem: May continue drug If SJS/TEN, DRESS: Strict avoidance TAKE HOME POINTS Classification of ADRs is useful in determining appropriate diagnostic procedures and options for further treatment History is the most important initial diagnostic tool in PCN/drug allergy evaluation PCN skin testing has potential to play a public health role by decreasing use of broad-spectrum Abx and lowering health care costs REFERENCES Gruchalla RS, Piromohamed M. Antibiotic allergy. N Engl J Med 2006;354:601-609. Khan DA , Solensky R. Drug allergy. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2010;125:S126:37. Pichler WJ. An approach to the patient with drug allergy. UpToDate, 2010 . 1-23. Solensky R, Khan DA . Drug Allergy: An Updated Practice Parameter. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2010;105:2-78. Tam S. Drug allergy. In Allergy and Asthma: Practical Diagnosis and Management. Mahmoudi M, ed. McGraw Hill, New York, 2008. 236-246. THANK YOU!!! Special thanks to my colleague Carah Santos, M.D., for sharing some of her well-designed slides and Thank you to the American College of Allergy Asthma and Immunology for their assistance in data collection And Thank you to the Maine Assoc. of Physician Assistance for inviting me to speak today. Questions, Comments??