• Anesthesiology · Aug 2018

    Review

    Presumed β-Lactam Allergy and Cross-reactivity in the Operating Theater: A Practical Approach.

    • β-lactam allergy, particularly penicillin allergy is the most common perioperative patient-reported sensitivity, in up to 35% of patients.
    • Unneccessary switching to non-β-lactams for surgical prophylaxis is not cost-free, and is contributing to the rise of c. difficile and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE).
    • Patient history of penicillin allergy is of variable quality, and often does not allow the allergy to be ruled-out.

    • Step 1 – differentiate drug side effects from allergy. Isolated nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea are usually side effects.

    • Step 2 – identify the type of hypersensitivity.

      • Most drug reactions are Type 4 (T-cell mediated), delayed from 2 hours to days after exposure. Mostly benign cutaneous symptoms (eg. rash) that do not necessarily require avoiding future β-lactam exposure, except in the case of Stevens-Johnson syndrome.
      • Type 1 (IgE-mediated) hypersensitivities are immediate (minutes to 2 hours) but less common, causing urticaria, angioedema and/or anaphylaxis. Future exposure should be avoided.
      • Type 2 (cytotoxic) and Type 3 (immune complex) are much less common, and present with more serious, though delayed, reactions (days to weeks).
    • Take home: Mild symptoms (eg. rash developing more than 2h after exposure) probably do not require β-lactam avoidance. If there is a history of moderate or severe reaction, then avoiding all β-lactams is wise.

    • Of interest: Although R1 side-chain similarity is the main contributor to penicillin-cephalosporin cross-reactivity, importantly, 1st generation cephazolin has a different R1 side-chain and has been reported to not cross-react. Other cephalosporins share side-chains with specific penicillins.

    • Finally, stop giving IV test doses. It makes no sense from a safety point of view and offers no useful information.

    summary
    • Jeroen Hermanides, Bregtje A Lemkes, Jan M Prins, Markus W Hollmann, and Ingrid Terreehorst.
    • From the Departments of Anesthesiology (J.H., M.W.H.) Internal Medicine (B.A.L., J.M.P.) Otorhinolaryngology (I.T.), Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
    • Anesthesiology. 2018 Aug 1; 129 (2): 335-342.

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    Notes

    summary
    1
    • β-lactam allergy, particularly penicillin allergy is the most common perioperative patient-reported sensitivity, in up to 35% of patients.
    • Unneccessary switching to non-β-lactams for surgical prophylaxis is not cost-free, and is contributing to the rise of c. difficile and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE).
    • Patient history of penicillin allergy is of variable quality, and often does not allow the allergy to be ruled-out.

    • Step 1 – differentiate drug side effects from allergy. Isolated nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea are usually side effects.

    • Step 2 – identify the type of hypersensitivity.

      • Most drug reactions are Type 4 (T-cell mediated), delayed from 2 hours to days after exposure. Mostly benign cutaneous symptoms (eg. rash) that do not necessarily require avoiding future β-lactam exposure, except in the case of Stevens-Johnson syndrome.
      • Type 1 (IgE-mediated) hypersensitivities are immediate (minutes to 2 hours) but less common, causing urticaria, angioedema and/or anaphylaxis. Future exposure should be avoided.
      • Type 2 (cytotoxic) and Type 3 (immune complex) are much less common, and present with more serious, though delayed, reactions (days to weeks).
    • Take home: Mild symptoms (eg. rash developing more than 2h after exposure) probably do not require β-lactam avoidance. If there is a history of moderate or severe reaction, then avoiding all β-lactams is wise.

    • Of interest: Although R1 side-chain similarity is the main contributor to penicillin-cephalosporin cross-reactivity, importantly, 1st generation cephazolin has a different R1 side-chain and has been reported to not cross-react. Other cephalosporins share side-chains with specific penicillins.

    • Finally, stop giving IV test doses. It makes no sense from a safety point of view and offers no useful information.

    Daniel Jolley  Daniel Jolley
     
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