Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGodfrey McLaughlin Modified over 9 years ago
1
Insect Sting Allergy and Venom Immunotherapy David B.K. Golden, M.D. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
2
History of Reaction to Insect Stings (Skin Test Positive Patients) No reaction Large Local Cutaneous Systemic Anaphylaxis
3
Severe swelling 24 hrs after a sting should be treated with: A. Antibiotics C. Antihistamine E. Epinephrine B. Prednisone D. Venom immunotherapy
4
Venom immunotherapy: A. Is not necessary (“He’ll outgrow it”) B. Is dangerous C. is only partially effective D. Is forever E. None of the above
5
Diagnosis of Insect Sting Allergy (Indications for Venom Immunotherapy) History Venom Skin Test (RAST) Natural History
6
Symptoms and Signs of Insect Sting Anaphylaxis in Adults and Children Frequency (%) Symptoms or Sign Adults Children Cutaneous only 1560 Urticaria/angioedema8095 Dizziness/hypotension6010 Dyspnea/wheezing5040 Throat tightness/4040 Hoarseness Loss of consciousness30 5
7
Epidemiology of Venom Allergy History of systemic reaction in 0.5%-3.0% of the population Positive venom skin test or RAST in 15%-25% of the population. Transient positive skin test or RAST may occur after uneventful sting. Presence of IgE venom antibody not necessarily predictive of clinical reactivity.
8
Correlation of Yellow Jacket Venom RAST and Skin Tests (Golden - JAMA 1989) Venom Skin Test RAST (ng/L) Positive Negative < 1 (negative) 9 (24%) 190 (89%) ≥ 1 (positive) 29 (76%) 23 (11%) 1.0 - 1.9 8 9 2.0 - 2.9 5 4 3.0 - 4.9 4 5 ≥5.0 12 5 Total 38 213
9
History Positive Patients with Negative Venom Skin Tests Possible explanations: Not true allergic reaction (no objective signs) Allergy “outgrown” Mastocytosis (~1 % of insect allergic patients) Not detected: - Refractory period (anergy) - RAST positive
10
Diagnostic Venom Test Reactivity after Systemic Sting Reaction (Goldberg and Confino-Cohen; JACI 1997) Time after sting 1 week 4 - 6 week Any Skin Test Positive 20 (53%) 15 (39%) 35 (92%) RAST Positive 24 (63%) 8 (21%) 32 (84%) Any Positive 30 (79%) 8 (21%) 38 (100%)
11
Venom Skin Test / RAST in History Positive Patients (Golden - JACI 2001) Total history positive patients screened: (N=307) ST positive 208 (68%) ST negative 99 (32%) ST - neg/RAST neg 56 (57%) (18%) ST - neg/RAST positive 43 (43%) RAST 1 - 3 ng/ml 36 RAST 7 - 243 ng/ml 7
12
Diagnosis of Insect Allergy in Patients With Positive History (Systemic) Skin test positive68% ST negative / RAST positive14% ST neg / RAST neg / sting challenge positive 1% No sting allergy17%
13
Low Risk Sub-Groups of Patients With Positive Venom Skin Tests Risk of Sting Reaction History Systemic Reaction Children - Cutaneous Systemic 10 % Large Local 5 - 10 %
14
Insect Sting Allergy in Children (1978 -1987) (Schuberth, Valentine, Kagey-Sobotka, Lichtenstein) History N Disposition of Patients Cutaneous 462 Untreated vs. VIT systemic untreated (n=352) treated (VIT) (n=110) Mod-severe 345 VIT advised systemic untreated (n=99) treated (VIT) (n=246) Large Local 226 No VIT TOTAL 1033
15
Summary Of Sting Reactions 490 Stings in 180 Patients over 9 Yrs
16
Natural History of Large Local Reactions Diagnostic Test Sting Reaction Skin Test RAST Systemic LL Graft et al (J Ped 1984) 105/125 2/54 20/54 children (84%) (4%) (37%) Mauriello et al (JACI 1984) 105/133 67/133 1/28 21/28 adults and children (79%) (50%) (4%) (75%) Golden et al (JACI 1984) 38/52 5/52 adults (73%) (10%) Abrecht et al (Clin Allergy 1980) 27/40 29/40 children and adults (68%) (73%)
17
Repeat Systemic Reaction In Sting Allergic Patients STUDY (YEAR) N SYSTEMIC (%) GOLDEN (1981) 115 75 (65%) HUNT (1978) 23 19 (61%) SETTIPANE (1979) 119 72 (61%) LANTNER (1989) 18 11 (61%) REISMAN (1992) 220 124 (56%) GALATAS (1994) 27 13 (48%) PARKER (1982) 16 7 (44%) DVORIN (1984) 19 8 (42%) BLAAUW (1985) 86 29 (39%) FRANKEN (1994) 228 90 (39%) vanderLINDEN (1994) 324 96 (30%) TOTAL 1195 544 (46%)
18
Risk of Systemic Reaction in Untreated Skin Test Positive Patients Original Sting Reaction Risk of Systemic Reaction Severity Age 1 - 9 yrs 10 - 20 yrs No reaction Adult 17 % Large local All 10 % 10 % Cutaneous Child 10 % 5 % systemic Adult 20 % 10 % Anaphylaxis Child 40 % 30 % Adult 60 % 40 %
20
Controlled Trial of Venom Immunotherapy (Hunt et al, NEJM 1978)
21
Venom Immunotherapy Treatment Protocols ConservativeModerateLiberal Regimen Traditional Modified Rush Rush Weeks to Mc 20 - 26 8 1 Dose (µg) 50 100 200 Maintenance (wks) 4 6 - 8 12
22
Dose Response of Venom Immunotherapy (Rueff et al JACI 2001;108:1027-32.)
23
Premedication During Venom Immunotherapy Terfenadine Placebo Brockow et al (JACI 1997) Systemic during VIT 1/82 (1%) 6/39 (15%) Large Local during VIT20/80 (24%) 17/39 (45%) Muller et al (JACI 2001) Systemic during VIT 5/24 (21%) 13/23 (56%) Systemic to challenge sting 0/20 6/21 (28%)
24
Venom-IgE and Skin Test During and After Venom Immunotherapy
25
Discontinuing Venom Immunotherapy: Reported Studies and Criteria Author Patients Criteria Studied Proposed Graft (1984) children 5-7 years* 5 years Urbanek (1985) children RAST neg RAST neg Randolph (1986) adults & children RAST neg RAST neg Keating (1991) adults & children 2-10 years* 5 years Haugaard (1991) adults 3-7 years* 3 years Muller (1991) adults & children 3-10 years* 3 years* Reisman (1993) adults & children 1-6 years 3+ years Lerch (1998) adults & children 3-10 years* 5 years # Golden (1998) adults 5-7 years 5 years # * Negative sting challenge included as criterion for discontinuation. # Excluding patients with life-threatening history, honeybee allergy or systemic reaction during VIT.
26
Discontinuing Venom Immunotherapy (Lerch and Muller 1998) NSystemic P (pts/stings)Reaction (%) VIT Duration <50 months118 pts21 (18%) >50 months 82 pts 4 (5%) 0.007 Insect Honeybee120 pts19 (15.6%) Vespid 80 pts 6 (7.5%) 0.08 Time since D/C VIT 1-2 years444 stings20 (4.5%) 3-5 years211 stings30 (14%) 0.001 6-7 years 64 stings 5 (8%)
27
Discontinuing Venom Immunotherapy (Golden et al JACI 2000) Systemic reaction Venom Skin Test Positive10% / sting Venom Skin Test Negative10% / sting Off VIT 3 yrs (1 - 4 yrs)10% / sting Off VIT 10 yrs (5 - 13 yrs)10% / sting Cumulative risk (10 yrs)17%
28
COLLABORATORS Lawrence M. Lichtenstein Anne Kagey-Sobotka Robert G. Hamilton Philip S. Norman Timothy J. Craig Denise C. Kelly Kristin Chichester Tina D. Grace General Clinical Research Center (GCRC): Johns Hopkins Bayview, Baltimore, MD Penn State University, Hershey, PA Funding: NIH AI08270 (L. M. Lichtenstein, P.I.)
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.