Efficacy of a Clinical Decision Rule to Enable Direct Oral Challenge in Patients With Low-Risk Penicillin Allergy
The University of Melbourne · McGill University Health Centre · +10 more institutions
Abstract
Fewer than 5% of patients labeled with a penicillin allergy are truly allergic. The standard of care to remove the penicillin allergy label in adults is specialized testing involving prick and intradermal skin testing followed by an oral challenge with penicillin. Skin testing is resource intensive, limits practice to specialist-trained physicians, and restricts the global population who could undergo penicillin allergy delabeling.
To determine whether a direct oral penicillin challenge is noninferior to the standard of care of penicillin skin testing followed by an oral challenge in patients with a low-risk penicillin allergy. Design, Setting, and Participants: This parallel, 2-arm, noninferiority, open-label, multicenter, international randomized clinical trial occurred in 6 specialized centers, 3 in North America (US and Canada) and 3 in Australia, from June 18, 2021, to December 2, 2022. Eligible adults had a PEN-FAST score lower than 3. PEN-FAST is a prospectively derived and internationally validated clinical decision rule that enables point-of-care risk assessment for adults reporting penicillin allergies. Interventions: Patients were randomly assigned to either direct oral challenge with penicillin (intervention arm) or a standard-of-care arm of penicillin skin testing followed by oral challenge with penicillin (control arm). Main Outcome and Measure: The primary outcome was a physician-verified positive immune-mediated oral penicillin challenge within 1 hour postintervention in the intention-to-treat population. Noninferiority was achieved if a 1-sided 95% CI of the risk difference (RD) did not exceed 5 percentage points (pp).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 22
Authors
25- AMAna Maria CopaescuCorresponding
The University of Melbourne, McGill University Health Centre, Austin Health
- SVSara Vogrin
The University of Melbourne, St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne
- FJFiona James
Austin Health
- KCKyra Chua
Austin Health
- MRMorgan Rose
The University of Melbourne, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Austin Health
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Penicillin
- Randomized controlled trial
- Population
- Allergy
- Clinical endpoint
- Clinical trial
- Intensive care medicine