Vyles David, Adams Juan, Chiu Asriani, Simpson Pippa, Nimmer Mark, Brousseau David C
Pediatric Emergency Medicine,
Asthma/Allergy and Clinical Immunology, and.
Pediatrics. 2017 Aug;140(2). doi: 10.1542/peds.2017-0471. Epub 2017 Jul 3.
Penicillin allergy is commonly reported in the pediatric emergency department (ED). True penicillin allergy is rare, yet the diagnosis results from the denial of first-line antibiotics. We hypothesize that all children presenting to the pediatric ED with symptoms deemed to be low-risk for immunoglobulin E-mediated hypersensitivity will return negative results for true penicillin allergy.
Parents of children aged 4 to 18 years old presenting to the pediatric ED with a history of parent-reported penicillin allergy completed an allergy questionnaire. A prespecified 100 children categorized as low-risk on the basis of reported symptoms completed penicillin allergy testing by using a standard 3-tier testing process. The percent of children with negative allergy testing results was calculated with a 95% confidence interval.
Five hundred ninety-seven parents completed the questionnaire describing their child's reported allergy symptoms. Three hundred two (51%) children had low-risk symptoms and were eligible for testing. Of those, 100 children were tested for penicillin allergy. The median (interquartile range) age at testing was 9 years (5-12). The median (interquartile range) age at allergy diagnosis was 1 year (9 months-3 years). Rash (97 [97%]) and itching (63 [63%]) were the most commonly reported allergy symptoms. Overall, 100 children (100%; 95% confidence interval 96.4%-100%) were found to have negative results for penicillin allergy and had their labeled penicillin allergy removed from their medical record.
All children categorized as low-risk by our penicillin allergy questionnaire were found to have negative results for true penicillin allergy. The utilization of this questionnaire in the pediatric ED may facilitate increased use of first-line penicillin antibiotics.
在儿科急诊科(ED),青霉素过敏的报告很常见。真正的青霉素过敏很少见,但由于拒绝使用一线抗生素而导致了这种诊断结果。我们假设,所有因被认为是免疫球蛋白E介导的超敏反应低风险症状而到儿科急诊科就诊的儿童,青霉素过敏检测结果均为阴性。
有家长报告青霉素过敏史且到儿科急诊科就诊的4至18岁儿童的家长完成了一份过敏问卷。根据报告症状预先指定100名被归类为低风险的儿童,通过标准的三层检测流程完成青霉素过敏检测。计算过敏检测结果为阴性的儿童百分比,并给出95%置信区间。
597名家长完成了描述其孩子报告的过敏症状的问卷。302名(51%)儿童有低风险症状,符合检测条件。其中,100名儿童接受了青霉素过敏检测。检测时的中位(四分位间距)年龄为9岁(5至12岁)。过敏诊断时的中位(四分位间距)年龄为1岁(9个月至3岁)。皮疹(97例[97%])和瘙痒(63例[63%])是最常报告的过敏症状。总体而言,100名儿童(100%;95%置信区间96.4%至100%)青霉素过敏检测结果为阴性,其病历中标记的青霉素过敏记录被删除。
通过我们的青霉素过敏问卷被归类为低风险的所有儿童,青霉素过敏检测结果均为阴性。在儿科急诊科使用该问卷可能有助于增加一线青霉素类抗生素的使用。