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.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
23
Two-dose amoxicillin challenge
Children's Medical Center Dallas
Dallas, Texas, United States
Subjects Who Complete Risk-stratification of Penicillin Allergy in the Pediatric Primary Care Setting
Time frame: Day 1
Subjects Stratified as Low-risk With a Negative Immediate Amoxicillin Challenge in the Pediatric Primary Care Setting
Time frame: Day 1
Penicillin Allergy Labeling in Subjects With Negative Amoxicillin Challenge
Subjects who have a penicillin allergy label added back to their electronic health record at 10-14 months after amoxicillin challenge.
Time frame: 10-14 months after amoxicillin challenge
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