1. Comparing pharmacists versus allergists in low-risk penicillin allergy delabelling: The Hong Kong Penicillin Allergy Pharmacist Initiative (HK-PAPI)
- Author
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James K.Y. Hooi, MBChB, Marshall C.H. Low, BPharm, Jonathan C.L. To, BPharm, Hugo W.F. Mak, MBBS, Mandy M. Choi, BPharm, Chris C.P. Tam, BPharm, Raymond W.M. Mak, MSc, Vincent K.C. Wong, MPharm, Timo C.C. Chan, MClinPharm, Andrew W.T. Li, MClinPharm, Charlie C.Y. Mak, MClinPharm, Valerie Chiang, MBBS, Gordon K.H. Chu, MBBS, Jane C.Y. Wong, MBBS, and Philip H. Li, MD
- Subjects
Hypersensitivity ,Delabelling ,Low-risk ,Penicillins ,Pharmacists ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: Mislabelled penicillin allergies are associated with a myriad of adverse outcomes and development of anti-microbial resistance. With the overwhelming need for specialist allergy services, pharmacist initiatives such as the Hong Kong Penicillin Allergy Pharmacist Initiative (HK-PAPI) have been advocated. However, evidence of their effectiveness, safety and impact on health-related quality-of-life (HR-QoL) are lacking.To assess and compare the effectiveness, safety and improvements on HR-QoL of pharmacists vs allergists in a pilot low-risk penicillin allergy delabelling initiative. Methods: All adult patients referred for low-risk penicillin allergy were randomized and evaluated by either pharmacists or allergists in a 1:3 ratio. Outcomes and changes in Drug Hypersensitivity Quality of Life Questionnaire (DrHy-Q) scores were compared. Results: Of 323 patients referred, 96.3% (311/323) completed penicillin allergy evaluation (pharmacists: 83 [24.3%] vs allergists: 228 [66.7%]). Overall, 93.6% (291/311) were delabelled with no difference between evaluations by pharmacists and allergists (92.8% vs 93.9%, p = 0.729). There were no severe or systemic reactions in either cohort. Patients evaluated by either pharmacists (43.4 [SD:29.1] to 10.5 [SD:5.93], p
- Published
- 2024
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