| Literature DB >> 23282382 |
Mario Sánchez-Borges1, Riccardo Asero, Ignacio J Ansotegui, Ilaria Baiardini, Jonathan A Bernstein, G Walter Canonica, Richard Gower, David A Kahn, Allen P Kaplan, Connie Katelaris, Marcus Maurer, Hae Sim Park, Paul Potter, Sarbjit Saini, Paolo Tassinari, Alberto Tedeschi, Young Min Ye, Torsten Zuberbier.
Abstract
: Urticaria and angioedema are common clinical conditions representing a major concern for physicians and patients alike. The World Allergy Organization (WAO), recognizing the importance of these diseases, has contributed to previous guidelines for the diagnosis and management of urticaria. The Scientific and Clinical Issues Council of WAO proposed the development of this global Position Paper to further enhance the clinical management of these disorders through the participation of renowned experts from all WAO regions of the world. Sections on definition and classification, prevalence, etiology and pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis are based on the best scientific evidence presently available. Additional sections devoted to urticaria and angioedema in children and pregnant women, quality of life and patient-reported outcomes, and physical urticarias have been incorporated into this document. It is expected that this article will supplement recent international guidelines with the contribution of an expert panel designated by the WAO, increasing awareness of the importance of urticaria and angioedema in medical practice and will become a useful source of information for optimum patient management worldwide.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23282382 PMCID: PMC3651155 DOI: 10.1097/WOX.0b013e3182758d6c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Classification of Urticaria Subtypes (Presenting With Wheals and/or Angioedema) Based on the Different Eliciting Stimuli
| Types | Subtypes | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous urticaria | Acute spontaneous urticaria | Spontaneous wheals and/or angioedema < 6 wk |
| Chronic spontaneous urticaria | Spontaneous wheals and/or angioedema > 6 wk | |
| Urticarias induced by physical agents | Cold contact urticaria | Eliciting factor: cold objects/air/fluids/wind |
| Delayed pressure urticaria | Eliciting factor: vertical pressure (wheals arising with a 3-12 h latency) | |
| Heat contact urticaria | Eliciting factor: localized heat | |
| Solar urticaria | Eliciting factor: UV and/or visible light | |
| Urticaria factitia/dermographic urticaria | Eliciting factor: mechanical shearing forces (wheals arising after 1-5 min) | |
| Vibratory urticaria/angioedema | Eliciting factor: vibratory forces, e.g. pneumatic hammer | |
| Other inducible urticarias | Aquagenic urticaria | Eliciting factor: water |
| Cholinergic urticaria | Elicitation by increase of body core temperature due to physical exercises, spicy food | |
| Contact urticaria | Elicitation by contact with urticariogenic substance | |
| Exercise-induced anaphylaxis/urticaria | Eliciting factor: physical exercise |
Modified with permission from Zuberbier et al [4]. Copyright 2009 John Wiley & Sons.
Quality of Evidence and Strength of Recommendation for Use of Intervention Based on the GRADE System [182] (Updated to August, 2011)
| Drug | Quality of Evidence | Strength of Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Second-generation antihistamines (at licensed doses) | High | Strong (+) |
| First-generation antihistamines | High | Strong (-) |
| Second-generation antihistamines (at higher than licensed doses) | Moderate | Weak (+) |
| Anti-H2-antihistamines as add-on therapy | Moderate | Weak (+) |
| Oral corticosteroids (short course) | Low | Weak (+) |
| Oral corticosteroids | Very low | Strong (-) |
| Leukotriene receptor antagonists (as add-on therapy) | Low | Weak (+) |
| Anti-inflammatory agents (dapsone, sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine, colchicines, mycophenolate mofetil) | Low-very low | Weak (+) |
| Immunosuppressive agents | ||
| Cyclosporine | Moderate | Weak (+)* |
| Methotrexate | Very low | Weak (+) |
| Cyclophosphamide | Very low | Weak (+) |
| Biologic agents | ||
| Omalizumab, | Moderate | Weak (+)* |
| IVIG | Low | Weak (+) |
(+), recommendation for medication; (-), recommendation against medication.
*Although the recommendation is "weak" according to the GRADE approach, it is stronger than in other cases based on the quality of existing evidence.
Figure 1A, Provocation testing for physical and cholinergic urticaria
Figure 2B, Treshold testing for physical urticaria..
Figure 3Algorithm for the treatment of chronic urticaria.