General Anesthetic Drug Allergy Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Clinical Study on Pseudo-allergic Reaction to Anesthetic Drugs During General Anesthesia
Perioperative anaphylactic reactions are immediate, hypersensitive reactions that are potentially life-threatening resulting from a sudden release of mediators from mast cells and basophiles. Which is due to either immune (IgE or non-IgE mediated) or non-immune mechanisms. Pseudo-allergic are defined as those reactions that produce the same clinical symptoms with anaphylaxis but are not IgE mediated, occur through a direct nonimmune-mediated release of mediators from mast cells and/or basophils or result from direct activation.so pseudo-allergic reactions do not require previous contact with the substance. Recent studies have shown that a mast-cell-specific receptor,G-protein-coupled receptor MRGPRX2,is crucial for pseudo-allergic drug reactions.in this study. In the study, we will examine the MRGPRX2 gene in patients with pseudo-allergic reactions during anesthesia, aiming at clarifying the relationship between pseudo-allergic reactions and MRGPRX2 gene.
Many of the drugs in general anaesthesia can elicit adverse drug reactions which fall apart
into two major types. First, reactions that are usually dose-dependent and related to the
pharmacological properties of the drug and/or its metabolites. Second, reactions that are
unrelated to the drug's pharmacological characteristics and that are less dose-dependent.
These reactions comprise drug intolerance, idiosyncratic reactions and drug-induced
immune-mediated allergic and nonimmune-mediated so-called pseudo-allergic. The degree of
severity varies and does not allow differentiation between an IgE-mediated or non- IgE
mediated reaction resulting from nonspecific mediator release. The incidence of
perioperative anaphylactic reactions varies from region, there is no relevant literature
about the incidence of perioperative drug allergies in China.in other countries this varies
widely between 1/1700 and 1/20000. The mortality from these reaction is in the range from 3
to 6%, and an additional 2% of patients experience significant residual brain damage. A
French multi-centre study show NMBAs are the most common agents, being the most frequently
involved substances, ranging between 50 and 70%, followed by latex (12-16.7%), and in recent
reports, by antibiotics (15%).
Benjamin et al found in their experiments that members of all NMBD families (except
succinylcholine) and the fluoroquinolone family of antibiotics activated mast cells in an
Mrgprb2(the orthologue of the human G-protein-coupled receptor MRGPRX2)-dependent manner at
concentrations as low as 0.5% of the clinical injection concentration. They determine that
MRGPRX2 are targets of many small-molecule drugs associated with systemic pseudo-allergic
reactions. In our study, patients with general anesthesia in Xiangya hospital of Central
South University were selected as the subjects. Patients with anaphylaxis during anesthesia
and has signed an informed consent were selected to extract MRGPRX2 gene exon sequences from
blood specimen. The patient's general information and allergy information were then
collected .After 4-6 weeks, we will conduct a skin test on suspicious drugs for patients who
have undergone allergic reactions. The aim of this study was to explore the relationship
between pseudo-allergic reaction and MRGPRX2 gene, and to find out the characteristics of
perioperative allergic reaction in our hospital.
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Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT01294163 -
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|
Phase 3 |