Antimicrobial anaphylaxis: the changing face of severe antimicrobial allergy

Abstract Objectives The epidemiology, clinical characteristics and outcomes of antimicrobial-associated anaphylaxis remain ill-defined. We sought to examine antimicrobial anaphylaxis with regard to: (i) the frequency of implicated antimicrobials; (ii) attributable mortality; and (iii) referral for d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of antimicrobial chemotherapy Vol. 75; no. 1; pp. 229 - 235
Main Authors Hall, Victoria, Wong, Micah, Munsif, Maitri, Stevenson, Brittany R, Elliott, Katie, Lucas, Michaela, Baird, Ashleigh J, Athan, Eugene, Young, Melissa, Pickles, Robert, Cheng, Allen C, Stewardson, Andrew J, Aung, Ar K, Trubiano, Jason A
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 01.01.2020
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Summary:Abstract Objectives The epidemiology, clinical characteristics and outcomes of antimicrobial-associated anaphylaxis remain ill-defined. We sought to examine antimicrobial anaphylaxis with regard to: (i) the frequency of implicated antimicrobials; (ii) attributable mortality; and (iii) referral for definitive allergy assessment. Methods This was conducted through a national retrospective multicentre cohort study at five Australian tertiary hospitals (January 2010 to December 2015). Cases of antimicrobial anaphylaxis were identified from ICD-10 coding and adverse drug reaction committee databases. Results There were 293 participants meeting the case definition of antimicrobial anaphylaxis and 310 antimicrobial anaphylaxis episodes. Of 336 implicated antimicrobials, aminopenicillins (62/336, 18.5%) and aminocephalosporins (57/336, 17%) were implicated most frequently. ICU admission occurred in 43/310 (13.9%) episodes; however, attributable mortality was low (3/310, 1%). The rate of anaphylaxis to IV antibiotics was 3.5 (95% CI=2.9–4.3) per 100 000 DDDs and the rate of hospital-acquired anaphylaxis was 1.9 (95% CI=2.1–3.3) per 100 000 occupied bed-days. We observed overall low rates of hospital discharge documentation (222/310, 71.6%) and follow-up by specialist allergy services (73/310, 23.5%), which may compromise medication safety and antimicrobial prescribing in future. Conclusions This study demonstrated that a high proportion of severe immediate hypersensitivity reactions presenting or acquired in Australian hospitals are secondary to aminopenicillins and aminocephalosporins. Overall rates of hospital-acquired anaphylaxis, predominantly secondary to cephalosporins, are low, and also associated with low inpatient mortality.
ISSN:0305-7453
1460-2091
DOI:10.1093/jac/dkz422