Title: Antibiotic and latex allergy
1Antibiotic and latex allergy
- Dr Alexandra Croom
- Consultant Allergist
- Glenfield Hospital, Leicester
2Epidemiology
- Adverse Drug Reactions
- 20 type B idiosyncratic
- Approx half of these immune mediated
- Most reactions cutaneous
- Urticaria
- Maculopapular rash
- EN, TEN, SJS
- 10 Europeans think they have drug allergy most
commonly penicillin - SPT suggests actual figure may be 5 (although up
to 25 in some selected populations)
3Immune reactions to antibiotics based on Gell
and Coombes classification
Based on Gruchalla N Engl J Med 2006 on-line
4Immune reactions to antibiotics based on Gell
and Coombes classification
5History
Skin prick testing
Intradermal testing
Challenge/provocation
6History taking in antibiotic allergy
- History of event often lost in sands of time
- Important to consider
- Nature of symptoms and their timing
- Risk factors
- Drug-related route of administration, how many
previous courses and rate of repetition - Host-determined gender, co-morbidity, family
history, atopy
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8Antibiotic allergy in cystic fibrosis
- Incidence of ADRs to antibiotics increased
4.5-25 in adults with CF - Immediate reaction in 1.9 of antibiotic courses
- Dependent on which antibiotic being used
- piperacillin highest risk
- azithromycin no greater than placebo
Parmar Thorax 2005 Koch Rev Infect Dis 1991
9Why is incidence higher in cystic fibrosis?
- Antibiotics given intravenously
- Number of course of antibiotics received
- Danish study 121 patients received 2800 courses
- Haptenisation (formation of allergenic
determinant) enhanced by presence of
infection/inflammation - Atopic children with CF more likely to be
colonised by pseudomonas
10Looking for drug specific IgE skin prick testing
11Skin prick testing
Lancet through allergen test solution
Weal formation
Preformed allergen specific IgE
Itch
Release of histamine
12Skin prick testing
- For aeroallergens quick, cheap and safe
- Not so straightforward for antibiotics
- only well validated for penicillin
- risk of anaphylaxis during prick testing for
penicillins - 5/147 patients with penicillin allergy had
systemic reaction following skin prick testing - more likely if initial reaction was anaphylaxis
- stop ß blockers prior to testing and optimise
asthma management - perform in supervised clinical environment
Minh J Allergy Clin Immunol Feb 2006
13Intradermal testing
- Allergen solution introduced intradermally
- Dilute solutions required
- Increased sensitivity use when SPT negative
- Increased risk of systemic reactions
- Painful
14Allergens in antibiotic allergy
- Allergens arise 2 ways
- Drugs low molecular weight lt1000 Da - to become
immunogenic need to covalently bind to HMW
proteins (allergens present in parent drug) - Novel allergens may be generated through
metabolism prior to haptenisation (allergens not
present in parent drug)
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18Gruchalla J Allergy Clin Immunol 2001
19Skin testing for penicillin allergy
- Replaced Allergopen after withdrawal in 2006
- Contains
- BPO (major determinant)
- PPL (minor determinant mix)
- Used in conjunction with SPTs using solutions of
amoxycillin and ampicillin
20Testing for penicillin allergy
- lt20 of those who report penicillin allergy have
positive skin prick tests - Negative testing indicates previous reaction not
IgE mediated or drug specific antibodies lost - Readminstration is safe if SPTS using major and
minor determinants are negative rate of reaction
is 4 (same as general population rate)
21Evolution of skin test sensitivity with time
- 5 year prospective study
- BPO/MDM positive
- 25/31 positive 12/12
- 18 positive at 36/12 (2 lost to follow up)
- 12 positive at 60/12 (1 lost to follow up)
- Amoxycillin positive
- 12/24 positive at 12/12
- 6 positive at 36/12 (1 lost to follow up)
- 0 positive at 60/12 (1 lost to follow up)
22Specific IgE assays for penicillin allergy
- Poor predictive value
- Do not contain minor determinants
- Negative result does not exclude allergy
- Positive result confirms allergy and prevents
unnecessary skin prick testing
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24Prescribing imipenem in patients with ß lactam
allergy
- First reports of cross reactivity (9/19) between
imipenem and penicillins published 1988 (Saxon J
Allergy Clin Immunol) - Romano et al (NEJM 2006)
- 112 patients with history of immediate reactions
to ß lactams and positive skin prick tests - 1/112 skin prick test positive with imipenem
- 110/111 with negative skin prick tests underwent
graded IM challenge with imipenem no reactions
25Tolerability of meropenem in patients with
penicillin allergy prospective study
- 104 participants, 14-83 y, history of immediate
response to penicillins - 104/104 positive skin test to at least one
penicillin reagent - 1/104 reacted to meropenem
- Initial reaction anaphylaxis after amoxycillin
and clavulinic acid combination - Reacted to all penicillin reagents on skin
testing including imipenem
Romano et al Annals Internal Med 07
26Giving cephalosporins to patients with history of
penicillin allergy
- Increased risk of reactions to cephalosporins if
penicillin allergic - 6/135 patients with penicillin allergy
- 2/351 with no history of penicillin allergy
- Increase risk of fatal anaphylaxis if
cephalosporins given where history of penicillin
allergy - 6/12 deaths due to antibiotics related to 1st
dose cephalosporins 3/6 history of penicillin
allergy
Kelkar N Engl J Med 2001, Pumphrey Lancet 1999
27Giving cephalosporins to patients with history of
penicillin allergy
- Controversial
- indiscriminate administration cannot be
recommended especially for patients with life
threatening reactions - may be attractive if allergy to penicillin is
mild, indication for use of that drug is strong,
skin testing is impracticable, treatment for
reactions is readily available
Gruchalla N Engl J Med 2006, Kelkar N Engl J Med
2001
28Allergy to non-beta lactam antibiotics
- Presumed IgE mediated reactions documented 1-3
of prescribed courses - No large scale validation of skin testing
- Allergenic determinants may be metabolites and
thus absent from solutions of parent drug - If low non-irritative concentrations used and
positive response provoked may indicate IgE
responsible - Negative skin tests do not exclude the presence
of drug specific IgE should drug be absolute
requirement next step would be incremental
administration to induce tolerance
29Non-Ige mediated reactions with antibiotics
30Maculopapular rash after penicillins
- 195 patients with cutaneous reactions after
penicillins - Evaluated with
- SPT intradermal testing
- patch testing
- oral challenge (if appropriate)
- 60/195 maculopapular rash
- 33/60 positive patch tests
- 18/30 agreed to rechallenge with culprit drug
all reacted with rash developing 6-24 hrs after
drug given
Romano Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 1998
31Maculopapular rash after penicillins
- 30/33 reacted to ampicillin or amoxycillin 3/33
reacted to Pen G - No patients reacted to MDM or PPL
- Conclusion that reactions triggered by side chain
binding and not beta lactam structure - ? MHC restricted HLA A2 and DRW52
over-represented
Romano Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 1998
32Ampicillin
Amoxicillin
Penicillin G
33Red man syndrome and vancomycin
- Pruritus, erythema, flushing and hypotension
- 50-90 of patients treated experience some
histamine release most mild - Histamine release is non-specific and related to
rate of infusion - Antihistamines will alleviate symptoms
- Some cases of IgE mediated reactions (including
anaphylaxis) to vancomycin are reported with
positive SPTs (but false positives common with
vancomycin concentrations gt 10µg/ml)
34Desensitisation in antibiotic allergy
- Possible with all antibiotics
- Risk only justified when drug in question is sole
treatment option - Mechanism not fully understood
- Tolerance achieved in hours
35Who to test?
36Who to test?
- ALL?
- Tests not good enough for that
- NONE?
- As is often the case
- SOME?
- Those with a current need for specific
antibiotics - Those with a predictable need for specific
antibiotics in the future - Confirmation of a recent serious reaction
37Antibiotic allergy summary
- Misconceptions about antibiotic allergy affect
clinical practice - Testing can inform rational prescribing
- Testing is safe (in specialist hands
www.bsaci.org.uk for drug allergy clinics) - When antibiotic allergy is present
desensitisation is effective at producing
tolerance and allowing treatment
38Latex allergy
- Obtained from tree - hevea brasiliensis
- Original reports of latex allergy from Germany in
1930s - First modern day reports of latex allergy early
1980s
39Epidemiology of latex allergy
- Few studies of incidence none of incidence over
time - Prevalence studies predominantly in at risk
groups - Serological studies on blood donors 3.3-7.6 of
population studied sensitisation rates higher in
men
40Epidemiology of latex allergy risk factors
- Spina bifida (OR 6.73)
- Multiple surgery (OR 1.14 per op)
- Atopic predisposition (OR 3.37)
- Occupational exposure
- HCWs
- Rubber industry
- Electronic industry
- Hidden - textiles
Hochleitner J Urol 2001
41Latex allergy and HCWs
7 March 1994
42Latex allergy and HCWs
- Increased prevalence of HCWs sensitisation to
latex attributed to glove use - Sensitisation rates 8-17
- Sensitisation enhanced by
- Glove protein content
- Whether powdered or not
- Exposure duration
43Reducing allergy in HCWs
- In 1997 Germany passed legislation to make use of
low-allergen, powder free NRL gloves mandatory - Prior to that about 80 gloves were powdered
- Incidence of latex-related contact urticaria was
monitored by statutory system of health insurance
and reporting of suspected occupational disease
44Allmers et al J Allergy Clin Immunol 2004
45Latex allergens
- Levels of allergens may be affected by growing
and manufacturing methods - Majority of allergens are defence proteins
production enhanced when tree under stress - Risk group reflected in allergen profile
46Kurup et al Clinical Molecular Allergy 2005
47Kurup et al Clinical Molecular Allergy 2005
48Diagnosing latex allergy
- Standardised skin prick test solutions available
- Results correlate with spIgE assays
- Anaphylaxis reported with latex skin prick
testing - False negatives occur if a good history of
acute type symptoms provocation test essential
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51Desensitisation in latex allergy
- Subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT)
- Leynadier J Allergy Clin Immunol 2000
- Sastre J Allergy Clin Immunol 2003
- Tabar Int Arch Allergy Immunol 2006
- Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT)
- Cistero Bahima J Invest Allergol Clin Immunol
2004 - Bernadini Curr Med Res Opin 2006
- Nettis Br J Dermatol 2007
52Conclusions
- Latex allergy is a phenomenon of last 3 decades
- Much of it was/is preventable
- Improved understanding of latex allergens has
enhanced diagnostics - Effective treatment is currently available for
those most at risk of re- exposure
53Conclusions
- Latex allergy is a phenomenon of last 3 decades
- Much of it was/is preventable
- Improved understanding of latex allergens has
enhanced diagnostics - Effective treatment is currently available for
those most at risk of re- exposure - but not in
the UK
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