| Literature DB >> 26525001 |
F Estelle R Simons1, Motohiro Ebisawa2, Mario Sanchez-Borges3, Bernard Y Thong4, Margitta Worm5, Luciana Kase Tanno6, Richard F Lockey7, Yehia M El-Gamal8, Simon Ga Brown9, Hae-Sim Park10, Aziz Sheikh11.
Abstract
The World Allergy Organization (WAO) Guidelines for the assessment and management of anaphylaxis provide a unique global perspective on this increasingly common, potentially life-threatening disease. Recommendations made in the original WAO Anaphylaxis Guidelines remain clinically valid and relevant, and are a widely accessed and frequently cited resource. In this 2015 update of the evidence supporting recommendations in the Guidelines, new information based on anaphylaxis publications from January 2014 through mid- 2015 is summarized. Advances in epidemiology, diagnosis, and management in healthcare and community settings are highlighted. Additionally, new information about patient factors that increase the risk of severe and/or fatal anaphylaxis and patient co-factors that amplify anaphylactic episodes is presented and new information about anaphylaxis triggers and confirmation of triggers to facilitate specific trigger avoidance and immunomodulation is reviewed. The update includes tables summarizing important advances in anaphylaxis research.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenaline; Anaphylaxis; Auto-injector; Drug allergy; Epinephrine; Exercise-induced anaphylaxis; Food allergy; Latex allergy; Stinging insect venom allergy; Systemic allergic reaction
Year: 2015 PMID: 26525001 PMCID: PMC4625730 DOI: 10.1186/s40413-015-0080-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Epidemiology and patient risk factors
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| Hospitalization rates for anaphylaxis continue to increase year-on-year [ |
| Anaphylaxis fatality rates have remained stable or decreased slightly. Fatalities are age-, co-morbidity-, and trigger-related [ |
| The highest hospital admission rates for food-induced anaphylaxis occur in very young children age 0–4 years; however, the rate of increase in the age groups 5–14 years and 15–29 years is accelerating [ |
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| Data from an anaphylaxis registry of more than 5000 patients with systemic allergic reactions indicated that although monotherapy with beta-blockers and to a lesser extent, ACE inhibitors, increased the risk of severe anaphylaxis, the risk was further increased by concurrent use of a drug from each class [ |
| In an experimental model, although a beta-blocker (metoprolol) given alone had a modestly aggravating effect and an ACE inhibitor (ramipril) given alone had no significant effect, anaphylaxis was exacerbated and mediator release was increased when these medications were given concurrently [ |
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| In a prospective study of co-factors that amplify anaphylaxis, wheat-dependent, exercise-induced anaphylaxis occurred when plasma gliadin levels were elevated by ingestion of higher gluten doses, gluten and exercise, or gluten and acetylsalicylic acid plus alcohol [ |
ACE angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor
Food, insect sting, and drug/iatrogenic triggers
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| In a prospective study, 10/12 patients with IgE-mediated mammalian meat-induced systemic allergic reactions had OFCs with meat. Symptom onset occurred in 3–7 hours and correlated with basophil activation and increased CD63 expression, likely reflecting the appearance of galactose-alpha 1,3-galactose (alpha-gal) in the blood. Controls remained asymptomatic after OFCs [ |
| Attributed to higher alpha-gal concentrations (or more accessible alpha-gal epitopes), pork kidney elicited symptoms and positive skin tests more consistently than pork muscle meat. Co-factors, including alcohol, NSAIDs, and exercise, amplified low levels of alpha-gal sensitization [ |
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| The relevance of asymptomatic sensitization to |
| The predictive value of |
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| The health consequences of penicillin “allergy” included costly longer admissions, greater use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, and increased prevalence of serious infections with |
| Risk factors for fatal anaphylaxis to a neuromuscular blocker included male sex, emergency setting, CVD/hypertension, concurrent beta-blocker treatment, and obesity [ |
| Of 228 consecutive patients with perioperative anaphylaxis, 9.6 % were sensitized to the antiseptic/disinfectant chlorhexidine, as determined using specific IgE measurements, basophil activation tests, and standardized skin tests [ |
alpha-gal galactose-alpha 1,3-galactose; BATs basophil activation tests, CVD cardiovascular disease, NSAIDs non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; OFCs oral food challenges
Diagnosis, initial treatment, and self-treatment in community settings
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| In a prospective controlled study of ED patients with anaphylaxis, up-regulation of innate inflammatory gene networks was reported. On ED arrival, two genes were expressed; one hour after arrival, 67 genes were expressed; and three hours after arrival, 2801 genes were expressed. Genomic responses provide new insights into the potential release of a cascade of mediators in anaphylaxis [ |
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| Early injection of epinephrine in anaphylaxis, defined as initial injection before ED arrival, significantly reduced the likelihood of hospital admission, compared with initial epinephrine injection after ED arrival [ |
| Epinephrine was injected before cardiac arrest in only 23 % of 92 individuals who experienced a fatal anaphylaxis episode [ |
| In an observational study, data confirmed the safety of IM epinephrine injection, typically given through an epinephrine auto-injector: (adverse events 1 %, and no overdoses). In contrast, IV bolus injections were associated with significantly more adverse events (10 %) and overdoses (13 %) [ |
| In a systematic review and meta-analysis of 27 studies, 4.7% of 4114 patients with anaphylaxis had biphasic episodes (range 0.4% to 23.3%). Patients who presented with hypotension or who had an unknown inciting trigger were at increased risk. The data suggested that for patients with anaphylaxis who are treated successfully in an ED, the duration of observation should be risk-stratified according to the clinical characteristics and severity of the episode [ |
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| Patients who were treated in an ED for anaphylaxis benefited from referral to A/I specialists who clarified the diagnosis and correctly identified and confirmed specific anaphylaxis triggers [ |
| Novel EAIs are now available in some countries. The compact Auvi-Q can be used correctly on first attempt by 93 % of parents who have never seen or heard it before. The Emerade is available in 0.15 mg, 0.3 mg, and 0.5 mg doses. The 0.3 mg and the 0.5 mg dose EAIs have a 25 mm long needle. EAIs differ significantly with regard to size, ease of carrying, ease of use, needle protection, and robustness. They are not interchangeable [ |
A/I allergy/immunology, ED emergency department, EAI epinephrine auto-injector, IM intramuscular, IV intravenous
Long-term management: trigger-specific prevention
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| Sustained clinical and immunological unresponsiveness to peanut was documented after up to 5 years of peanut oral immunotherapy. Responders had smaller skin test wheals and lower allergen-specific IgE levels at baseline and at the time of post-treatment peanut challenge, compared with non-responders [ |
| Sustained clinical and immunological responsiveness to peanut has been documented after up to 3 years of peanut sublingual immunotherapy. Responders had a significant decrease in peanut-specific basophil activation and skin prick test titration with peanut, as compared with non-responders [ |
| In selected high-risk infants with eczema, egg allergy, or both, who were aged 4–10 months (inclusive) at study entry, early introduction of peanut snacks (at least 6 grams weekly until age 60 months) prevented development of clinical reactivity to peanut [ |
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| In 100 adults who completed venom immunotherapy and had live sting challenges to prove efficacy, post-challenge scores on the Vespid Allergy Quality of Life Questionnaire improved significantly, independent of age, sex, or severity of the initial anaphylaxis episode [ |
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| In a retrospective study of patients with a history of hypersensitivity reactions during anesthesia, comprehensive evaluation, including skin tests and measurement of basal tryptase levels, followed by development of a management plan, minimized risk of subsequent reactions even when a specific trigger such as an antibiotic, neuromuscular blocker, or latex was not identified [ |
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| In 20 % of 110 patients with idiopathic anaphylaxis (no identifiable trigger by history, skin tests, or allergen-specific IgE levels), the etiology of the episode was identified by using the ImmunoCAP ISAC 103 allergen array in addition to the ImmunoCAP 250 platform. Omega-5 gliadin and shrimp were the most frequently identified sensitizations among those not previously recognized [ |