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Penicillin Allergy clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06303128 Recruiting - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Penicillin Allergy Delabeling After a One-Dose Versus Two-Dose Graded Direct Oral Challenge

Start date: February 3, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about dosing when testing to see if a penicillin allergy label can be removed from adults that had been labeled as "penicillin-allergic" previously. The main question it aims to answer is: - In penicillin-allergic patients that are at low risk of having an allergic reaction, is a one-dose oral challenge with amoxicillin (a penicillin-based antibiotic) as safe and effective as a two-dose oral challenge? Participants will, after being identified as having a low-risk penicillin allergy, be administered oral amoxicillin in a controlled setting and then monitored for an allergic reaction. Researchers will compare participants that took one dose of amoxicillin to participants that took two doses of amoxicillin (a small dose and then a larger dose) to see if either group was more likely to develop an allergic reaction.

NCT ID: NCT05956080 Not yet recruiting - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Penicillin Allergy Delabeling Among Surgical Patients

PenDel
Start date: September 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Penicillin allergy testing among surgical patients

NCT ID: NCT05823155 Recruiting - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Impact of Pre-operative Penicillin Allergy Evaluation on Surgical Prophylaxis

Start date: April 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Use of first-line pre-operative antibiotic prophylaxis is the most effective measure to optimize perioperative outcomes. However, this is often not achieved due to unsubstantiated penicillin allergy labels. Penicillin allergy evaluation, when incorporated into routine pre-operative assessment, is potentially effective in optimizing choice of surgical prophylaxis. Despite the encouraging data mentioned above, there is a lack of randomized trials or local data to support this practice.

NCT ID: NCT05563610 Terminated - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Oral Penicillin Challenge and Allergy De-labeling in Children

Start date: September 26, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The primary purpose of this study is to investigate the portion of penicillin allergy labels that are not true allergies using oral amoxicillin challenges among pediatric patients. The secondary purpose is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of administering oral penicillin allergy challenges in the Pediatric Emergency Department.

NCT ID: NCT05464615 Recruiting - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Geisinger Antibiotic Allergy Pilot Program: Assess and Address

GAAP
Start date: March 4, 2024
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective non-inferiority study to evaluate penicillin allergy history in patients with reported penicillin allergy, who require penicillin or penicillin-derivative antibiotic during inpatient admission using a focused questionnaire. A simplified scoring system will be assigned to patient responses, and the total score will be utilized to identify low-risk patients that have a minimal risk of allergic reactions on exposure to penicillin or its derivative. Patients determined to have low risk based on this questionnaire will be offered a test dose (graded challenge) of amoxicillin in a supervised setting, and if they tolerate it, penicillin allergy label will be removed from patient's chart. We hypothesize that at least 95% of low-risk patients will successfully pass the graded amoxicillin challenge so the penicillin allergy label can be removed from their charts. A proportion as low as 0.85 would be a good clinical outcome and considered non-inferior to the expected proportion of 0.95.

NCT ID: NCT05090527 Completed - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Penicillin Allergy Delabeling Project

PenProv
Start date: July 28, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A investigational study to establish: 1. A validated cllinical pathway for delabeling declared Penicillin allergiy outside allergologic departments. 2. A survey to examine anesthesiologists attitudes and knowledge about penicillin delabeling. 3. A qualitative focus group study investigating barriers and facilitators in penicillin delabeling among hospital nurses and physichians. 2. Implement the pathway for delabeling declared penicillin allergy outside allergologic clinics across the Western Norway health region.

NCT ID: NCT05020327 Completed - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Inpatient Penicillin Allergy Delabeling Study

Start date: September 22, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The study will identify pediatric patients 3-18 years old who have penicillin allergy label in the electronic medical record. Those who are identified will be stratified into no-risk, low-risk and high-risk category using a screening questionnaire. The following definitions will be followed: No-risk: Patients who are historically labeled with penicillin allergy in the EMR based on family history alone OR those who have tolerated penicillin after a concerning incident without any reaction OR with penicillin allergy label but deny any history of reaction to any form of penicillin on screening questionnaire Low-risk: Patients with previous reaction not suggestive of anaphylaxis (defined below) AND not requiring hospitalization for the reaction OR reaction considered non- immunologic (e.g. diarrhea, nausea, yeast vaginitis) OR exposure to penicillin- containing antibiotic after the date of reported reaction with no anaphylaxis and hospitalization AND no serious types of delayed reactions such as Steven- Johnson syndrome (SJS), toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), acute interstitial nephritis (AIN), drug-induced hepatitis or other documented organ injury, drug rash eosinophilia systemic symptoms (DRESS), hemolytic anemia, drug-induced cytopenia, and serum sickness. Patients who had delayed reaction (onset more than 24 hours) of isolated, non-progressive symptoms (such as rash/hives alone) also belong to this group. High-risk: Patients with penicillin allergy label on EMR with previous reaction suggestive of anaphylaxis (defined below) OR requiring hospitalization/epinephrine administration for the reaction OR reactions considered immunologic (angioedema, joint pains) OR involving serious types of reactions such as Steven-Johnson syndrome (SJS), toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), acute interstitial nephritis (AIN), drug-induced hepatitis or other documented organ injury, drug rash eosinophilia systemic symptoms (DRESS), hemolytic anemia, drug-induced cytopenia, and serum sickness. Patients who were previously diagnosed with penicillin allergy by an allergist also belong to the high-risk group. Patients in the no-risk group will be immediately delabeled. Patients in the high-risk group will be referred to allergy/immunology for further work up. The focus of this study is to identify the patients who belong to the low-risk group. This group of patients will be subjected to graded oral amoxicillin challenge testing. Those who will have reactions compatible with allergy will have their allergy status retained in the electronic medical record. Those that will not have reactions or those that will have reactions that are not compatible with allergy will be delabeled in the electronic medical record.

NCT ID: NCT05010304 Completed - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Penicillin De-labeling in the Pediatric Primary Care Setting

Start date: December 9, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

While reported adverse reactions to penicillins are common, most patients with a penicillin allergy label can safely tolerate penicillins, and elective evaluation for penicillin allergy has been recommended. For low-risk patients, direct oral challenge may be an optimal approach as a delabeling strategy. However, there is a vast disparity between the number of patients with a penicillin allergy label and practicing allergists in the United States, and implementing outpatient primary care-based delabeling strategies in low-risk patients may increase access to delabeling assessments. However, a recent survey of pediatricians identified perceived barriers to implementing penicillin allergy evaluations into their routine care. Significant gaps in knowledge exist regarding the feasibility of this approach involving risk stratification evaluation of reported penicillin adverse reactions and direct amoxicillin challenge procedures in low-risk patients in the pediatric primary care setting. With this, the primary aim of this study is to evaluate the number of patients for which risk-stratification and direct amoxicillin challenge are successfully completed in an outpatient pediatric primary care clinic.

NCT ID: NCT04620746 Completed - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Penicillin Allergy Testing in STD Clinics

Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Demonstration project to implement penicillin allergy testing in STD outpatients using a questionnaire and pen allergy testing

NCT ID: NCT04441021 Completed - Penicillin Allergy Clinical Trials

Feasibility Assessment of Risk Stratification and Oral Challenge in Hospitalized Children at Low Risk for Antibiotic Allergy

Start date: September 15, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Children are often reported to have antibiotics allergies, with approximately 10% of the US population labeled as allergic to an antibiotic. Recent studies have demonstrated that a large majority of children with a penicillin allergy label do not have a true IgE-mediated allergy. Appropriately delabeling antibiotic allergies has been shown to improve patient care outcomes and lower health care costs. However, efforts to implement these assessments in practice are lacking, particularly in the hospital setting. Therefore, there is a need for hospital-based risk assessment and delabeling strategies for hospitalized children. The investigator's objective is to determine the feasibility of implementing a hospital-based approach to penicillin allergy risk stratification and evaluation of patients at low-risk for true allergy.