Development and Validation of a Penicillin Allergy Clinical Decision Rule
- PMID: 32176248
- PMCID: PMC7076536
- DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2020.0403
Development and Validation of a Penicillin Allergy Clinical Decision Rule
Abstract
Importance: Penicillin allergy is a significant public health issue for patients, antimicrobial stewardship programs, and health services. Validated clinical decision rules are urgently needed to identify low-risk penicillin allergies that potentially do not require penicillin skin testing by a specialist.
Objective: To develop and validate a penicillin allergy clinical decision rule that enables point-of-care risk assessment of patient-reported penicillin allergies.
Design, setting, and participants: In this diagnostic study, a multicenter prospective antibiotic allergy-tested cohort of 622 patients from 2 tertiary care sites in Melbourne, Australia (Austin Health and Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre) was used for derivation and internal validation of a penicillin allergy decision rule. Backward stepwise logistic regression was used to derive the model, including clinical variables predictive of a positive penicillin allergy test result. Internal validation of the final model used bootstrapped samples and the model scoring derived from the coefficients. External validation was performed in retrospective penicillin allergy-tested cohorts consisting of 945 patients from Sydney and Perth, Australia, and Nashville, Tennessee. Patients who reported a penicillin allergy underwent penicillin allergy testing using skin prick, intradermal, or patch testing and/or oral challenge (direct or after skin testing). Data were collected from June 26, 2008, to June 3, 2019, and analyzed from January 9 to 12, 2019.
Main outcomes and measures: The primary outcome for the model was any positive result of penicillin allergy testing performed during outpatient or inpatient assessment.
Results: From an internal derivation and validation cohort of 622 patients (367 female [59.0%]; median age, 60 [interquartile range{IQR}, 48-71] years) and an external validation cohort of 945 patients (662 female [70.1%]; median age, 55 [IQR, 38-68] years), the 4 features associated with a positive penicillin allergy test result on multivariable analysis were summarized in the mnemonic PEN-FAST: penicillin allergy, five or fewer years ago, anaphylaxis/angioedema, severe cutaneous adverse reaction (SCAR), and treatment required for allergy episode. The major criteria included an allergy event occurring 5 or fewer years ago (2 points) and anaphylaxis/angioedema or SCAR (2 points); the minor criterion (1 point), treatment required for an allergy episode. Internal validation showed minimal mean optimism of 0.003 with internally validated area under the curve of 0.805. A cutoff of less than 3 points for PEN-FAST was chosen to classify a low risk of penicillin allergy, for which only 17 of 460 patients (3.7%) had positive results of allergy testing, with a negative predictive value of 96.3% (95% CI, 94.1%-97.8%). External validation resulted in similar findings.
Conclusions and relevance: In this study, PEN-FAST was found to be a simple rule that accurately identified low-risk penicillin allergies that do not require formal allergy testing. The results suggest that a PEN-FAST score of less than 3, associated with a high negative predictive value, could be used by clinicians and antimicrobial stewardship programs to identify low-risk penicillin allergies at the point of care.
Conflict of interest statement
Figures
Comment in
-
Re: Development and Validation of a Penicillin Allergy Clinical Decision Rule.J Urol. 2020 Oct;204(4):869. doi: 10.1097/JU.0000000000001215.01. Epub 2020 Jul 23. J Urol. 2020. PMID: 32701374 No abstract available.
-
Penicillinallergie ist meistens eine Fiktion : Patienten-Angaben überprüfen.MMW Fortschr Med. 2020 Aug;162(14):26. doi: 10.1007/s15006-020-0734-y. MMW Fortschr Med. 2020. PMID: 32780392 Review. German. No abstract available.
-
Safety of direct oral challenge to amoxicillin in pregnant patients at a Canadian tertiary hospital.J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2022 Jul;10(7):1919-1921.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2022.03.025. Epub 2022 Apr 8. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2022. PMID: 35398550 No abstract available.
References
-
- Trubiano JA, Chen C, Cheng AC, Grayson ML, Slavin MA, Thursky KA; National Antimicrobial Prescribing Survey (NAPS) . Antimicrobial allergy “labels” drive inappropriate antimicrobial prescribing: lessons for stewardship. J Antimicrob Chemother. 2016;71(6):1715-1722. doi:10.1093/jac/dkw008 - DOI - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
