·
Immediate reactions are reactions that develop within one hour of
administration. These are usually type I, immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated
reactions and are characterized by urticaria, angioedema, bronchospasm, and/or hypotension (refer table below for signs and
symptoms of anaphylaxis).
·
Non-immediate reactions are reactions that develop >1 hour of
administration, often after several hours or days. Common delayed reactions
include maculopapular rashes and urticarial eruptions. Rare types of delayed
reactions include serum sickness-like reactions, drug fever, and drug-induced
hypersensitivity syndrome.
Signs and Symptoms of
Anaphylaxis
|
|||
Skin
|
·
Feeling of warmth
·
flushing (erythema)
·
Itching
·
Urticaria,
·
Angioedema
·
"Hair standing on end" (pilor erection)
|
Cardio-vascular
|
·
Feeling of faintness or dizziness
·
Syncope
·
Altered mental status
·
Chest pain
·
Palpitations,
·
Tachycardia, bradycardia or other dysrhythmia,
·
Hypotension
·
Difficulty hearing
·
Urinary or fecal incontinence
·
Cardiac arrest
|
Oral
|
·
Itching or tingling of lips, tongue, or palate
·
Edema of lips, tongue, uvula
·
Metallic taste
|
||
Ocular
|
·
Periorbital itching, erythema and edema
·
Tearing
· Conjunctival erythema |
||
Respi-ratory
|
·
Nose - Itching, congestion, rhinorrhea, and sneezing
·
Laryngeal - Itching and "tightness" in the throat,
dysphonia, hoarseness, stridor
·
Lower airways - Shortness of breath (dyspnea), chest tightness,
cough, wheezing, and cyanosis
|
Neuro-logic
|
·
Anxiety
·
Apprehension Sense of impending doom
·
Seizures
·
Headache and confusion;
|
Gastro-intestinal
|
·
Nausea
·
Abdominal pain
·
Vomiting
·
Diarrhea
·
Dysphagia (difficulty swallowing)
|
Uterine
cramps in women and girls
|
Overall, the rate of allergic reactions to cephalosporins is approximately 10-fold lower than it is to penicillin.
Past immediate reactions to a
cephalosporin
Patients
with past immediate reactions to a cephalosporin can often be safely treated
with other beta-lactam drugs, including structurally dissimilar cephalosporins,
penicillins, carbapenems, and monobactams. However, this requires an
understanding of what is known about cross reactivity patterns among
cephalosporins and related drugs.
Cross
reactivity among cephalosporins and between cephalosporins and penicillins
commonly arises from structural similarities in side chain groups or rarely
from sensitization to the core beta-lactam ring (present both penicillins and
cephalosporins) or metabolites of this ring.
Patients
with past immediate reactions to cephalosporins who require subsequent use of
related antibiotics should be evaluated by an allergy specialist when possible.
The purpose of this evaluation is to determine what other drugs may be safely
administered to that patient. An algorithm depicts the approach to identifying
a safe alternative cephalosporin in a patient with a past immediate
cephalosporin reaction.
Most
patients with immediate reactions to cephalosporins and no history of
reacting to penicillins will tolerate penicillins. If a patient reacted to a
cephalosporin in the past and now requires a penicillin, then penicillin skin
testing is indicated to guide management.
● Negative results on penicillin skin testing
indicate that the patient's reaction to the cephalosporin was probably due to a
unique cephalosporin determinant. Therefore, the patient is not at increased
risk for reacting to a penicillin, provided that penicillin does not share a
side chain with the cephalosporin that caused the initial reaction.
● Positive results on penicillin skin testing indicate that the patient
may be reactive to the beta-lactam core, provided that the penicillin and
cephalosporin in question do not share similar side chains. The patient may be
treated with a non beta-lactam antibiotic or desensitized to the desired
penicillin.
When
Penicillin Skin Testing is NOT available
If penicillin skin testing is not available, we would suggest selecting a
penicillin that does NOT have a side chain similar to that on the culprit
cephalosporin, and skin testing with that penicillin (in its native form). If
negative, we suggest performing a graded challenge to the penicillin.
The determination to challenge with penicillin or amoxicillin/ampicillin may be based on the patient’s history and/or the drug that may need to be administered immediately or prescribed in the future. Patients should be observed as long as severe exposure-related reactions are anticipated. This recommendation depends on the type of previous drug reaction, the drug under investigation, and the patient’s individual condition. While the majority of Committee members advocate 60 minutes of observation following the final oral provocation dose, some judge 30 minutes to be adequate for many patients. For this reason, we encourage the allergist to tailor the observation time from 30 to 60 minutes, as they deem most appropriate.
A commonly used protocol is the administration of full dose oral beta lactam with monitoring for 30-60 minutes, but an alternative and more cautious protocol may be used that entails:
- A “test dose” (e.g, 10-25% of the full oral dose), observation for 30
minutes, followed by the remaining or full oral dose with monitoring for 30-60
minutes. (ACAAI 2010)
OR
- A starting dose that is usually 1/100 or 1/10 of the full dose. Ten-fold
increasing doses are administered every 30 to 60 minutes until the full
therapeutic dose is reached.(UptoDate 2014)
The reference
tables above are reproduced from the 2010 Drug Allergy Practice Parameter
Reference
tables of β-lactam antibiotics classified according to R1- and R2- side chains.
*Note from Joint Task
Force on Practice Parameters4
Patients with a history of an immediate-type allergic
reaction to a cephalosporin who require penicillin should undergo penicillin
skin testing. However, if penicillin skin testing is unavailable, because the
likelihood of reaction is low, cautious graded challenge with penicillin may be
considered in patients with a history of immediate-type allergy to
cephalosporins.
Use of the same cephalosporin that caused a previous reaction —Rarely, a patient requires the same cephalosporin
to which there is evidence of IgE-mediated allergy. A formal desensitization
protocol should be performed in this situation. The procedure described for
penicillin desensitization would be appropriate.
Carbapenems and Monobactam
Patients with immediate cephalosporin allergy
usually tolerate carbapenems (e.g., imipenem/cilastatin, meropenem, ertapenem,
and doripenem).
In the largest study available (Romano A et al. 2010), 98 patients with
convincing histories of immediate cephalosporin reactions and positive skin
tests to the culprit cephalosporin underwent allergy evaluation and graded
challenge with several related medications. Overall, fewer than 5 percent had
positive skin tests to carbapenems or monobactams. Penicillin skin
test–positive patients and patients with a history of penicillin allergy who do
not undergo skin testing should receive carbapenems via graded challenge.
Aztreonam is
the only monobactam available for clinical use. There is no evidence of
immunologic cross reactivity between the core cephalosporin structure and
monobactams, so most cephalosporin-allergic patients may receive aztreonam
normally. An exception is the patient with a past immediate reaction to ceftazidime,
because aztreonam and ceftazidime share an identical side chain, and cross
reactivity between the two drugs is reported. Therefore, penicillin and
cephalosporin allergic patients may safely receive aztreonam, with the exception of patients who are allergic to
ceftazidime.
Past non-immediate reactions to a
cephalosporin
- Structural similarities among drugs might predict the recurrence of non-immediate reactions. Cross reactivity between aminopenicillins (eg, ampicillin, amoxicillin, and bacampicillin) and aminocephalosporins, like cephalexin has been reported.
- Management options depend upon the type of reaction that occurred.
- If a patient has a history of a non–IgE-mediated reaction to cephalosporin (other than serious reactions such as SJS or TEN) and re quires penicillin, a graded challenge with penicillin may be performed and skin testing is not indicated.4
- The presence of fever, mucosal involvement, or systemic symptoms should be interpreted as a more severe type of drug reaction and the culprit cephalosporin should not be given again.
- Beta-lactam
antibiotic skin testing and oral challenge (ACAAI 2015 Drug Allergy and Anaphylaxis Committee).
- UptoDate: Cephalosporin-allergic
patients: Subsequent use of cephalosporins and related antibiotics [Accessed
26 Dec 2018]
- Sampson H.A. et al.. Second
symposium on the definition and management of anaphylaxis: Summary
report—Second National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease/Food
Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network symposium. (J Allergy Clin Immunol
2006;117:391-7.
- Joint Task Force on Practice Parameters,
American Academy of Allergy A, Immunology, American College of Allergy A,
Immunology, Joint Council of Allergy A, et al. Drug allergy: an updated
practice parameter. Annals of allergy, asthma & immunology : official
publication of the American College of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology.
2010;105(4):259-73.
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