The Quality and Management of Penicillin Allergy Labels in Pediatric Primary Care

Author:

Taylor Margaret G.12,Joerger Torsten34,Anvari Sara24,Li Yun456,Gerber Jeffrey S.378,Palazzi Debra L.12

Affiliation:

1. aDivision of Infectious Diseases

2. bDepartment of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas

3. cDivision of Infectious Diseases

4. eDivision of Immunology, Allergy, and Retrovirology

5. fPediatric IDEAS Research Group of the Center for Pediatric Clinical Effectiveness

6. gDepartment of Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Informatics

7. dDepartment of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

8. hPerelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Penicillin allergy labels are the most common drug allergy label. The objective of this study was to describe the quality and management of penicillin allergy labels in the pediatric primary care setting. METHODS Retrospective chart review of 500 of 18 015 children with penicillin allergy labels born from January 1, 2010 to June 30, 2020 randomly selected from an outpatient birth cohort from Texas Children’s Pediatrics and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia networks. Penicillin allergy risk classification (“not allergy,” “low risk,” “moderate or high risk,” “severe risk,” “unable to classify”) was determined based on documentation within (1) the allergy tab and (2) electronic healthcare notes. Outcomes of allergy referrals and penicillin re-exposure were noted. RESULTS Half of penicillin allergy labels were “unable to classify” based on allergy tab documentation. Risk classification agreement between allergy tabs and healthcare notes was fair (Cohen’s ĸ = 0.35 ± 0.02). Primary care physicians referred 84 of 500 (16.8%) children to an allergist, but only 54 (10.8%) were seen in allergy clinic. All children who were challenged (25 of 25) passed skin testing. Removal of allergy labels was uncommon (69 of 500, 13.8%) but occurred more often following allergy appointments (26 of 54, 48%) than not (43 of 446, 9.6%, P < .001). Children delabeled by primary care physicians were as likely to tolerate subsequent penicillin-class antibiotics as those delabeled by an allergist (94% vs 93%, P = .87). CONCLUSIONS Penicillin allergy documentation within the allergy tab was uninformative, and children were infrequently referred to allergists. Future quality improvement studies should improve penicillin allergy documentation and expand access to allergy services.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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