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Guideline for the diagnosis of drug hypersensitivity reactions

Authors :
Axel Trautmann
Torsten Zuberbier
Andreas J. Bircher
Wolfgang Pfützner
Thomas Fuchs
Randolf Brehler
Thilo Jakob
Heinrich Dickel
H. Sitter
Bettina Wedi
Hans F. Merk
Bernhardt Sachs
Margitta Worm
Gerda Wurpts
Hagen Ott
Oliver Pfaar
Lars Lange
Maja Mockenhaupt
Bernhard Przybilla
Regina Treudler
Knut Brockow
Werner Aberer
Johannes Ring
Source :
Allergo Journal International. 24:94-105
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

Drug hypersensitivity reactions are unpredictable adverse drug reactions. They manifest either within 1–6 h following drug intake (immediate reactions) with mild to life-threatening symptoms of anaphylaxis, or several hours to days later (delayed reactions), primarily as exanthematous eruptions. It is not always possible to detect involvement of the immune system (allergy). Waiving diagnostic tests can result in severe reactions on renewed exposure on the one hand, and to unjustified treatment restrictions on the other. With this guideline, experts from various specialist societies and institutions have formulated recommendations and an algorithm for the diagnosis of allergies. The key principles of diagnosing allergic/hypersensitivity drug reactions are presented. Where possible, the objective is to perform allergy diagnostics within 4 weeks–6 months following the reaction. A clinical classification of symptoms based on the morphology and time course of the reaction is required in order to plan a diagnostic work-up. In the case of typical symptoms of a drug hypersensitivity reaction and unequivocal findings from validated skin and/or laboratory tests, a reaction can be attributed to a trigger with sufficient confidence. However, skin and laboratory tests are often negative or insufficiently reliable. In such cases, controlled provocation testing is required to clarify drug reactions. This method is reliable and safe when attention is paid to indications and contraindications and performed under appropriate medical supervision. The results of the overall assessment are discussed with the patient and documented in an „allergy passport“ in order to ensure targeted avoidance in the future and allow the use of alternative drugs where possible.

Details

ISSN :
21970378
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Allergo Journal International
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0fe7247cb67113f356adb951aef8beec