Thompson Carol C, Saracco Benjamin, Pruthi Anika, Cerceo Elizabeth
Department of Educational Leadership, Administration, and Research, Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ, USA.
Rowan University Libraries, Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ, USA.
Int J Gen Med. 2025 Jun 27;18:3477-3488. doi: 10.2147/IJGM.S519844. eCollection 2025.
Alpha-gal syndrome (AGS), a tick-borne allergy, is increasing as its vectors migrate throughout the US and the world. There were an estimated 450,000 cases in the US. AGS reactions to mammalian foods and medical products include delayed anaphylaxis, urticaria, gastrointestinal and cardiac symptoms often difficult to connect to the source. Despite its seriousness, provider knowledge is limited. This rapid review investigated published works on AGS from 2020 to 24; it also sought to determine the breadth of AGs publications across different fields and specialties. We identified 355 studies of AGS diagnosis and management from 2020 to 2024 via Cochrane Central, Medline via the PubMed interface, and Embase (additional grey literature via Web of Science and Google Scholar). Studies were assessed for quality and risk of bias using JBI critical appraisal tools. Two hundred and nineteen studies met the criteria. One hundred and sixty-eight (77%) were full studies; 51 (23%) were conference presentations. Studies remained largely confined to allergy and immunology literature, despite their implications for other organ systems. Although patients present with symptoms to emergency departments and dermatology clinics there is a paucity of literature in those fields and others; several studies document practitioners' lack of knowledge. Inclusion of content within medical school curricula is needed to establish foundational knowledge on the topic. With the increase in patients presenting with AGS, and with the reach of AGS across multiple fields, physicians and other health care providers need to be able to diagnose and then manage AGS with their patients. This rapid review has documented the problem of silos in disseminating information about AGS widely through the medical field. The remedy for a lack of practitioner knowledge is education.
α-半乳糖综合征(AGS)是一种由蜱传播的过敏症,随着其传播媒介在美国乃至全球范围内迁徙,其发病率正在上升。美国估计有45万例病例。AGS对哺乳动物源性食物和医疗产品的反应包括迟发性过敏反应、荨麻疹、胃肠道和心脏症状,这些症状往往难以追溯源头。尽管其严重性,但医疗服务提供者对此的了解有限。本快速综述调查了2020年至2024年期间关于AGS的已发表研究;还试图确定不同领域和专业中AGS出版物的广度。我们通过Cochrane中心、PubMed界面的Medline以及Embase(通过Web of Science和谷歌学术搜索获取的其他灰色文献),确定了2020年至2024年期间355项关于AGS诊断和管理的研究。使用JBI批判性评估工具对研究进行质量和偏倚风险评估。219项研究符合标准。其中168项(77%)为完整研究;51项(23%)为会议报告。尽管这些研究对其他器官系统有影响,但研究仍主要局限于过敏和免疫学文献。虽然患者在急诊科和皮肤科诊所出现症状,但这些领域及其他领域的文献很少;几项研究记录了从业者知识的缺乏。医学院课程需要纳入相关内容,以建立该主题的基础知识。随着AGS患者数量的增加,以及AGS涉及多个领域,医生和其他医疗服务提供者需要能够诊断并与患者一起管理AGS。本快速综述记录了在医学领域广泛传播有关AGS信息方面存在的信息孤岛问题。解决从业者知识缺乏问题的方法是教育。