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Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment

Background: Penicillin allergies are frequently reported and are associated with adverse clinical and antimicrobial stewardship outcomes. Allergy delabeling, either by patient history or skin testing and oral challenge can facilitate removal of penicillin allergy label. However, penicillinallergies...

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Autores principales: Monday, Lea, Goteti, Ravitej, Michniak, Jaclyn, Zoratti, Edward, Weinmann, Allison
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9614866/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2022.95
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author Monday, Lea
Goteti, Ravitej
Michniak, Jaclyn
Zoratti, Edward
Weinmann, Allison
author_facet Monday, Lea
Goteti, Ravitej
Michniak, Jaclyn
Zoratti, Edward
Weinmann, Allison
author_sort Monday, Lea
collection PubMed
description Background: Penicillin allergies are frequently reported and are associated with adverse clinical and antimicrobial stewardship outcomes. Allergy delabeling, either by patient history or skin testing and oral challenge can facilitate removal of penicillin allergy label. However, penicillinallergies are often reinstated in the medical record and data is limited about how and why this occurs. In our center, the departments of allergy and infectious diseases utilize an allergist nurse practitioner for penicillin allergy delabeling. We investigated the prevalence of penicillin allergy reinstatement following removal and associated factors thereof. Methods: We performed a retrospective observational study of patients who previously had penicillin allergy removed by the allergist nurse practitioner between August 2020 and May 2021 (250 days). Patients were followed for a minimum of 8 months and up to 16 months after penicillin allergy removal. We then assessed whether the allergy was reinstated. Clinical characteristics were compared between patients with penicillin allergy reinstated and not reinstated using the χ(2) and Mann-Whitney U test. The primary end point was prevalence of penicillin allergy reinstatement following removal. Results: During the study period, 81 patients had penicillin allergy removed, but it was later reinstated in 19 patients (23%) (Fig 1). Median time to reinstatement was 94 days. Allergies were reinstated most frequently by nurses (53%) and medical assistants (37%). Reinstatement occurred in both outpatient (53%) and inpatient (47%) settings. In 18 of 19 cases, there was no acknowledgment that a prior assessment had determined the patient was not allergic to penicillin. Only 1 patient experienced a reaction prompting reinstatement of penicillin allergy. Once the allergy was redocumented, it was subsequently mentioned in a median of 17 notes per patient. Comorbidities did not differ between patients with allergy reinstated versus those without (Table 1). Patients with penicillin allergy reinstated were more often originally delabeled via history rather than skin test followed by oral challenge and were more likely to have been readmitted subsequently. Conclusions: Penicillin allergies were redocumented in almost one-quarter of patients, most frequently by a nonphysician team member and without acknowledgement of prior removal. Patients who undergo skin testing may be less likely to continue to report a penicillin allergy to medical staff compared to those whose allergy is removed based on history. Increased interactions with the healthcare system may have contributed to having the allergy reinstated. Funding: None Disclosures: None
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spelling pubmed-96148662022-10-29 Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment Monday, Lea Goteti, Ravitej Michniak, Jaclyn Zoratti, Edward Weinmann, Allison Antimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol Antibiotic Stewardship Background: Penicillin allergies are frequently reported and are associated with adverse clinical and antimicrobial stewardship outcomes. Allergy delabeling, either by patient history or skin testing and oral challenge can facilitate removal of penicillin allergy label. However, penicillinallergies are often reinstated in the medical record and data is limited about how and why this occurs. In our center, the departments of allergy and infectious diseases utilize an allergist nurse practitioner for penicillin allergy delabeling. We investigated the prevalence of penicillin allergy reinstatement following removal and associated factors thereof. Methods: We performed a retrospective observational study of patients who previously had penicillin allergy removed by the allergist nurse practitioner between August 2020 and May 2021 (250 days). Patients were followed for a minimum of 8 months and up to 16 months after penicillin allergy removal. We then assessed whether the allergy was reinstated. Clinical characteristics were compared between patients with penicillin allergy reinstated and not reinstated using the χ(2) and Mann-Whitney U test. The primary end point was prevalence of penicillin allergy reinstatement following removal. Results: During the study period, 81 patients had penicillin allergy removed, but it was later reinstated in 19 patients (23%) (Fig 1). Median time to reinstatement was 94 days. Allergies were reinstated most frequently by nurses (53%) and medical assistants (37%). Reinstatement occurred in both outpatient (53%) and inpatient (47%) settings. In 18 of 19 cases, there was no acknowledgment that a prior assessment had determined the patient was not allergic to penicillin. Only 1 patient experienced a reaction prompting reinstatement of penicillin allergy. Once the allergy was redocumented, it was subsequently mentioned in a median of 17 notes per patient. Comorbidities did not differ between patients with allergy reinstated versus those without (Table 1). Patients with penicillin allergy reinstated were more often originally delabeled via history rather than skin test followed by oral challenge and were more likely to have been readmitted subsequently. Conclusions: Penicillin allergies were redocumented in almost one-quarter of patients, most frequently by a nonphysician team member and without acknowledgement of prior removal. Patients who undergo skin testing may be less likely to continue to report a penicillin allergy to medical staff compared to those whose allergy is removed based on history. Increased interactions with the healthcare system may have contributed to having the allergy reinstated. Funding: None Disclosures: None Cambridge University Press 2022-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9614866/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2022.95 Text en © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Antibiotic Stewardship
Monday, Lea
Goteti, Ravitej
Michniak, Jaclyn
Zoratti, Edward
Weinmann, Allison
Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
title Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
title_full Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
title_fullStr Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
title_full_unstemmed Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
title_short Penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
title_sort penicillin allergy reinstatement in a cohort of patients previously delabeled following formal allergy assessment
topic Antibiotic Stewardship
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9614866/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2022.95
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