| Literature DB >> 25705232 |
Gordon Sussman1, Jacques Hébert2, Wayne Gulliver3, Charles Lynde1, Susan Waserman4, Amin Kanani5, Moshe Ben-Shoshan6, Spencer Horemans1, Carly Barron1, Stephen Betschel1, William H Yang7, Jan Dutz5, Neil Shear1, Gina Lacuesta8, Peter Vadas1, Kenneth Kobayashi7, Hermenio Lima4, F Estelle R Simons9.
Abstract
In the past few years there have been significant advances which have changed the face of chronic urticaria. In this review, we aim to update physicians about clinically relevant advances in the classification, diagnosis and management of chronic urticaria that have occurred in recent years. These include clarification of the terminology used to describe and classify urticaria. We also detail the development and validation of instruments to assess urticaria and understand the impairment on quality-of-life and the morbidity caused by this disease. Additionally, the approach to management of chronic urticaria now focuses on evidence-based use of non-impairing, non-sedating H1-antihistamines given initially in standard doses and if this is not effective, in up to 4-fold doses. For urticaria refractory to H1-antihistamines, omalizumab treatment has emerged as an effective, safe option.Entities:
Keywords: Antihistamines; Chronic urticaria; Classification; Diagnosis; Immunology; Management; Omalizumab; Up-dosing
Year: 2015 PMID: 25705232 PMCID: PMC4336710 DOI: 10.1186/s13223-015-0072-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol ISSN: 1710-1484 Impact factor: 3.406
Figure 1Chronic spontaneous urticaria.
Classification of chronic urticaria subtypes (presenting with wheals, angioedema, or both)
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| Persists for less than 6 weeks | Chronic spontaneous urticaria |
| Persists for at least 6 weeks | ||
| Inducible urticaria | ||
| Occurs in response to an identifiable (physical) trigger. | ||
| Subtypes include: | ||
| ● Physical urticaria (dermographism, cold urticaria, delayed pressure urticaria, solar urticaria, heat urticaria, vibratory angioedema) | ||
| ● Cholinergic urticaria | ||
| ● Contact urticaria | ||
| ● Aquagenic urticaria |
Figure 2Angioedema.
Figure 3Dermographism.
Figure 4The dermographometer, or FricTest®, (left), a standardized instrument for diagnosis of dermatographic urticaria and the TempTest® (right) a new tool for diagnosing cold urticaria. Both instruments are produced by Moxie GmbH (Berlin, Germany).
Recommended investigations in urticaria according to type and subtype
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| Spontaneous urticaria | Acute spontaneous urticaria | None | None* |
| Chronic spontaneous urticaria | CBC with differential and ESR or CRP | (i) Allergen skin testing, and measurement of allergen-specific IgE levels are seldom required in CSU. Measurement of IgG levels to foods has no diagnostic value. (ii) functional autoantibodies; (iii) thyroid hormones and autoantibodies; (iv) physical tests; (v) tryptase; (vi) autologous serum skin test; (vii) lesional skin biopsy | |
| Inducible urticaria | Cold urticaria | Cold provocation and threshold test: apply an ice cube to the skin for 5 min, or, if available, use a TempTest; urticaria appears on re-warming | CBC with differential and ESR/CRP cryoproteins |
| Delayed pressure urticaria | Pressure test | None | |
| Heat urticaria | Heat provocation and threshold test | None | |
| Solar urticaria | UV and visible light of different wave lengths | Rule out other light-induced dermatoses | |
| Symptomatic dermographism | Elicit dermographism by stroking skin firmly with a tongue depressor or, if available, use a FricTest | None | |
| Aquagenic urticaria | Wet cloths at body temperature applied for 20 min | None | |
| Cholinergic urticaria | Exercise and hot bath provocation | None | |
| Contact urticaria | None |
CBC, complete blood count; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP, C-reactive protein; NSAID, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug.
*Acute urticaria and angioedema can also occur in the context of anaphylaxis. Such patients should be tested to allergens relevant to the history of their anaphylactic episode, eg. foods, stinging insect venoms or medications (references [2,3]).
The Urticaria Activity Score (UAS7) for assessing disease activity in chronic spontaneous urticaria
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| 0 | None | None |
| 1 | Mild (<20 wheals/24 h) | Mild (present but not annoying or troublesome) |
| 2 | Moderate (20–50 wheals/24 h) | Moderate (troublesome but does not interfere with normal daily activity or sleep) |
| 3 | Intense (>50 wheals/24 h or large confluent areas of wheals) | Intense (severe pruritus, which is sufficiently troublesome to interfere with normal daily activity or sleep) |
Urticaria treatment algorithm
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| Second-generation non-impairing non-sedating antihistamines | Standard dosing. Desloratadine 5 mg OD. Loratadine 10 mg OD. Cetirizine HCI 10 mg OD. Fexofenadine HCI 60 mg BID |
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| Increase dosage up to four-times the standard dose1,2 of a second-generation non-impairing non-sedating antihistamine | Up-dosing to the limit specified, eg. Desloratadine up to 20 mg OD. Cetirizine HCI up to 40 mg OD3. Montelukast 10 mg OD |
| Exacerbation: oral corticosteroid |
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| ↓ | Omalizumab 150 mg or 300 mg, SC Q4 wks. Cyclosporine A 2.5-5 mg/kg/day and taper with response |
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| Oral corticosteroids, for example, 0.3-0.5 mg/kg of prednisone or equivalent, followed by tapering of the dose in half every 3–7 days over a maximum duration of 2–4 weeks |
| Add-on to second-line treatment: omalizumab, cyclosporine A, consider specialist referral to allergist/dermatologist. Exacerbation: oral corticosteroid |
1Standard dose means the usual recommended dose.
2Double the initial recommended pediatric dose in case of non-response.
3Can cause sedation at these doses.