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What is the Extent of Safety and Efficiency of Drug Desensitization on Patients with Allergic Reactions? . Cindy Law Dr. Mary Lee-Wong . What are Allergies?. An abnormal sensitivity to an allergen that is inhaled, eaten, or touched An overreaction of a hypersensitive immune system
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What is the Extent of Safety and Efficiency of Drug Desensitization on Patients with Allergic Reactions? Cindy Law Dr. Mary Lee-Wong
What are Allergies? • An abnormal sensitivity to an allergen that is inhaled, eaten, or touched • An overreaction of a hypersensitive immune system • Misidentification of a harmless substance as harmful
Common Types of Allergies • Allergic rhinitis • Food • Medication • Insect stings • Latex • chemical
Allergies and the Immune System • B-lymphocytes &T-lymphocytes • Lymphocytes identifies a foreign invader • Foreign antigens cause production of antibodies • 5 types of immunoglobulins
Anaphylaxis • Severe allergic reaction prominent in dermal and systemic signs • Common causes are food, medication, insect stings, and latex • symptoms may begin in as little as five to 15 minutes to up to two hours after exposure to the allergen
EpiPen • epinephrine is a synthetic version of a naturally occurring hormone also known as adrenaline • causes rapid constriction of blood vessels, reversing throat swelling, relaxing lung muscles to improve breathing, and stimulating the heartbeat.
Allergy Tests • Scratch test • Diluted extract of the possible allergen to the back or arm • Scratching the skin with the needle • Blood tests
Places and Symptoms of Reactions • The sensitized immune system produces antibodies against allergens which cause the release of histamines into bloodstream
Treatments • Avoidance • Medication • Immunotheraphy • The injections help the immune system to produce fewer IgE antibodies, while also stimulating the production of a blocking antibody IgG
Drug Desensitization • Drug Desensitization allows safe delivery of an antibiotic to a patient which has an IgE medicated sensitivity to the drug by administering it in small doses until a full therapeutic dose is clinically tolerated • The procedure entails risk of acute allergic reactions, including death
Drug Desensitization Protocols • 1. Skin test patient to determine degree of sensitivity: a. Dilute available drug solutions/suspension to 1/3 mg/ml. b. Prepare three tenfold dilutions. c. Perform prick-puncture testing with 1:1000 dilution d. If negative, serial intradermal tests (0.02 ml [2-4mm bleb] in duplicate) up to and including 3 mg/ml stock; discontinue testing when >8 m wheal is observed. Test is positive if both duplicate wheals increase significantly (>2-3 mm) 20 min after placement compared with diluent control.2. Prepare sufficient quantities of drug solution/suspension for desensitization regimen in half-log 10 dilutions (threefold and tenfold dilutions from concentrate [1-3 mg/ml]).
Protocol Cont’d • 1. Establish baseline monitoring of patient in medical setting appropriate for patient's clinical conditions and the nature and severity of the prior reaction. Start a secure intravenous infusion.2. Starting dose: If skin test negative and test is unvalidated, begin with 0.1 ml of 1/3 microgram/ml solution/suspension; if skin test positive, begin 100-fold below the dose producing a midpint (5-8 mm wheal) reaction.3. Route; oral by ingestion or ng tube in 30 ml water; parenteral by intradermal (<0.2 ml), SC (0.2-0.6 ml), or intramuscular (>0.6 ml) injection.
Protocol Cont’d • 4. Dosing interval: 15-20 min for parenteral doses; 20-30 min for oral dosing. Repeat dose for mild systemic reaction: drop back two doses (tenfold) for moderate reactions, further for any reactions producing hemodynamic changes.5. Dose escalation; half-log 10 (-threefold) increments; e.g., 1 g, 3 g, 10 g, 30 g, 100 g, etc.6. If IV therapy is indicated, begin infusion to deliver a dose equivalent to the last oral/parenteral dose slowly over 1 hour. Double the infusion rate every hour until target therapeutic dosing is achieved.
Background: • A 32 year old female is pregnant and is diagnosed with syphilis • Penicillin is the ideal antibiotic to treating • The mother is allergic to penicillin • Her obstetric history included one vaginal delivery at term and four subsequent spontaneous abortions at 12 to 16 weeks.
Bibliography • .Sullivan TJ. Drug Allergy. In: Midleton E, Jr. ed. Allergy, principles, and practice. 4th ed. St. Louis: CV Mobsby Co, 1993: 1725-1746 • .Ohman JL, Jr. Clinical and immunologic responses to immunotherapy. In: Lockey RF, Bukantz SC, eds. Allergen immunotheraPY. New York: Marcel Decker, Inc, 1991: 209-232 • .Yunginger JW. Insect Allergy. In: Midleton E, Jr, ed. Allergy, principles, and practice. 4th ed. St. Louis: CV Mobsby Co, 1993: 1511-1514 • .Patterson R, De Swarte RD, Greenberger PA, et al. Drug Allergy and protocols for mangement of drug allegies. N Engl Reg Allergy Proc 1986; 7: 325. • .In: The extra pharmacopoeia. 29th ed. London: The Pharmaceutical Press, 1989, 1189-1195 • .Monaghan MS, Glasco G, et al. Safe administration of iron dextran to patient who reacted to the test dose. South Med J 1994: 87(10): 1010-1012 • .Fishbane S, Ungureanu VD, Maesaka JK, et al. The Safety if intravenous iron dextran in hemodialysis patients. Am J Kidney Dis 1996: 28(4): 529-534 • .Novey HS, Pahl M, Haydik Y, Vaziri ND, Immunologic studies of anaphylaxis to iron destran in patients on renal dialysis. Ann Allergy 1994; 72(3): 224-228 • .Patterson R, De Swarte RD, Greenberger PA, et al. Drug Allergy and protocols for managements to drug allergies. Allergy Proc (Spanish edition) 1995;9(2):13 • .Bridges KR, Bunn HF. Anemias with distributed iron metabolism. In: Isselbacher KJ, Braunwald E, Wilson JD, et al, eds. Harrison’s. Principles of internal medicine. 13th ed. McGraw-Hill, 1994; 1721-1723 • .Patterson R, De Swarte RD, Greenberger PA, et al. Drug Allergy and protocols for managements to drug Allergies. N Engl Reg Allergy Proc 1986; 7: 325-342 • .Sullivan TJ, Yecies LD, Shats GS, et al. Desensitization of patients allergic to penicillin using orally administered beta-lactam antibiotics. J Allergy Clin Immunol 1982; 69:275-282 • .Stark BJ, Earl HS, Gross GN, et al. Acute and chronic desensitization of penicillin. J Aallergy Clin Immunol 1987; 79: 523-532
Special Thanks to: • Harlem Children Society • Dr. Sat • Dr.Mary Lee-Wong • Beth Israel Medical Center