Detalhes do Documento

Skin testing in patients with hypersensitivity reactions to iodinated contrast ...

Autor(es): Brockow, K cv logo 1 ; Romano, A cv logo 2 ; Aberer, W cv logo 3 ; Bircher, AJ cv logo 4 ; Barbaud, A cv logo 5 ; Bonadonna, P cv logo 6 ; Faria, E cv logo 7 ; Kanny, G cv logo 8 ; Lerch, M cv logo 9 ; Pichler, WJ cv logo 10 ; Ring, J cv logo 11 ; Rodrigues Cernadas, J cv logo 12 ; Tomaz, E cv logo 13 ; Demoly, P cv logo 14 ; Christiansen, C cv logo 15 ; European Network of Drug Allergy and the EAACI interest group on drug hypersensitivity cv logo 16

Data: 2009

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.4/1269

Origem: Repositório do Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra

Assunto(s): Hipersensibilidade a Medicamentos; Meios de Contraste; Testes Cutâneos


Descrição
BACKGROUND: Iodinated contrast media cause both immediate and nonimmediate hypersensitivity reactions. The aim of this prospective study was to determine the specificity and sensitivity of skin tests in patients who have experienced such reactions. METHODS: Skin prick, intradermal and patch tests with a series of contrast media were conducted in 220 patients with either immediate or nonimmediate reaction. Positive skin tests were defined according to internationally accepted guidelines. Seventy-one never-exposed subjects and 11 subjects who had tolerated contrast medium exposure, served as negative controls. RESULTS: Skin test specificity was 96-100%. For tests conducted within the time period from 2 to 6 months after the reaction, up to 50% of immediate reactors and up to 47% of nonimmediate reactors were skin test positive. For immediate reactors, the intradermal tests were the most sensitive, whereas delayed intradermal tests in combination with patch tests were needed for optimal sensitivity in nonimmediate reactors. Contrast medium cross-reactivity was more common in the nonimmediate than in the immediate group. Interestingly, 49% of immediate and 52% of nonimmediate symptoms occurred in previously unexposed patients. Many of these patients were skin test positive, indicating that they were already sensitized at the time of first contrast medium exposure. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that at least 50% of hypersensitivity reactions to contrast media are caused by an immunological mechanism. Skin testing appears to be a useful tool for diagnosis of contrast medium allergy and may play an important role in selection of a safe product in previous reactors.
Tipo de Documento Artigo
Idioma Inglês
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