Department of Infectious Diseases, Infection Control, and Employee Health, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Tex.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Infection Control, and Employee Health, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Tex.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2019 Sep-Oct;7(7):2185-2191.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2019.03.025. Epub 2019 Mar 27.
Use of penicillin skin testing (PST) to rule out penicillin (PCN) allergies is safe and effective in immunocompetent patients; however, data on immunocompromised patients are limited.
We aimed to determine safety, efficacy, and clinical impact of PST in immunocompromised patients with cancer.
A quality improvement process establishing a PST service was implemented at MD Anderson Cancer Center. Adult patients admitted to leukemia and genitourinary medical oncology (GUMO) services with history of possible type I reactions to PCN were eligible for testing.
Between April and October 2017, 218 patients with reported PCN allergies were screened; 100 met inclusion criteria and underwent PST (67 leukemia, 33 GUMO). The most common reported allergy was to PCN (64%), with 61% reporting cutaneous reactions and 79% reporting reactions more than 20 years ago. PST with oral challenge results were overwhelmingly negative (95%); only 4% tested positive, and 1 test result was indeterminate (negative histamine control). After negative PST and oral challenge results, 51% patients were transitioned to PCN-based antibiotics during the same hospitalization. During the follow-up period (median 177 days), 65 of 95 patients were readmitted (185 total readmissions), and 51 patients required antibiotic therapy, with 37 receiving a PCN-based antibiotic (accounting for 336 days of therapy). No patient who received PCN-based antibiotics experienced an immediate-type allergic reaction.
Our findings support PST use in immunocompromised hosts. The widespread use of PST in patients with cancer will allow for optimal use of antimicrobial therapy and stewardship, which are vital in a population at increased risk for infections.
在免疫功能正常的患者中,使用青霉素皮试(PST)排除青霉素(PCN)过敏是安全有效的;然而,关于免疫功能低下患者的数据有限。
我们旨在确定 PST 在患有癌症的免疫功能低下患者中的安全性、有效性和临床影响。
在 MD 安德森癌症中心实施了一项质量改进流程,建立了 PST 服务。患有 PCN 可能 1 型反应史的入组白血病和泌尿生殖系统医学肿瘤学(GUMO)服务的成年患者符合进行检测的条件。
在 2017 年 4 月至 10 月期间,筛选了 218 例报告有 PCN 过敏史的患者;100 例符合纳入标准并接受了 PST(67 例白血病,33 例 GUMO)。最常见的报告过敏是对 PCN(64%),其中 61%报告有皮肤反应,79%报告反应发生在 20 年以上前。PST 联合口服激发试验的结果绝大多数为阴性(95%);仅 4%为阳性,1 项检测结果为不确定(组胺阴性对照)。在 PST 和口服激发试验结果为阴性后,51%的患者在同一住院期间转为使用 PCN 类抗生素。在随访期间(中位时间为 177 天),95 例患者中有 65 例(共 185 次再入院)再次入院,51 例患者需要接受抗生素治疗,其中 37 例接受了 PCN 类抗生素(占 336 天的治疗)。没有接受 PCN 类抗生素治疗的患者出现立即型过敏反应。
我们的研究结果支持在免疫功能低下宿主中使用 PST。在癌症患者中广泛使用 PST 将能够优化抗菌治疗和管理,这对于感染风险增加的人群至关重要。