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Anaphylaxis during anesthesia in France: An 8-year national survey

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TLDR
The incidence of allergic reactions during anesthesia, estimated on a national basis, is higher than previously estimated and the similar incidence of reactions according to sex before adolescence suggests a role for sex hormones in the increase of anaphylaxis observed in women.
Abstract
Background More attention should be paid to rare serious adverse events such as anaphylaxis to increase the safety of anesthesia. Objective To report the results of an 8-year survey of anaphylaxis during anesthesia in France. Methods Data from patients who experienced anaphylaxis between January 1, 1997, and December 31, 2004, were analyzed. Estimated incidences were obtained by combining this database with data from the French pharmacovigilance system by using a capture-recapture method. The number of patients exposed to the offending agents was obtained from data collected during the national survey of anesthesia practice. Results A total of 2516 patients was included. A diagnosis of IgE-mediated reaction was established in 1816 cases (72.18%). The most common causes were neuromuscular blocking agents ([NMBAs]; n = 1067; 58.08%), latex (n = 361; 19.65%), and antibiotics (n = 236; 12.85%). The median annual incidence per million procedures was higher for females 154.9 (5th-95th percentile, 117.2-193.1) than for males 55.4 (5th-95th percentile, 42.0-68.0). It reached 250.9 (5th-95th percentile, 189.8-312.9) for women in cases of allergic reactions to NMBAs. In children, a diagnosis of IgE-mediated reactions was obtained in 122 cases (45.9%). The most common causes were latex (n = 51; 41.8%), NMBAs (n = 39; 31.97%), and antibiotics (n = 11; 9.02%). In contrast with adults, no female predominance was observed. Conclusion The incidence of allergic reactions during anesthesia, estimated on a national basis, is higher than previously estimated. These results should be taken into account in the evaluation of the benefit-to-risk ratio of the various anesthetic techniques in individuals. The similar incidence of reactions according to sex before adolescence suggests a role for sex hormones in the increase of anaphylaxis observed in women.

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Anaphylaxis is more common with rocuronium and succinylcholine than with atracurium.

TL;DR: In Auckland, the rate of anaphylaxis to succinylcholine and rocuronium is approximately 10-fold higher than to atracurium, and this is the first study to report anphylaxis rates using a hard denominator of new patient exposures obtained directly from anesthetic records.
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Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are major causes of drug-induced anaphylaxis

TL;DR: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were implicated in most cases of anaphylaxis induced by drugs, and IgE-mediated reactions were less frequent but more severe, and adrenaline is underused.
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Fatal anaphylaxis with neuromuscular blocking agents: a risk factor and management analysis

TL;DR: Obese males with a history of cardiovascular disease receiving ongoing beta-blocker treatment and undergoing surgery in an emergency setting were at high risk of a fatal outcome after NMBA-induced anaphylaxis.
References
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TL;DR: The incidence of serious and fatal adverse drug reactions in US hospitals was found to be extremely high, and data suggest that ADRs represent an important clinical issue.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The nomenclatures proposed in the October 2003 report of the Nomenclature Review Committee of the World Allergy Organization is an update of the European Academy of Allergology and Clinical Immunology Revised NomenClature for Allergy Position Statement published in 2001.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a revised nomenclature for allergic and related reactions that can be used independently of target organ or patient age group, based on the present knowledge of the mechanisms which initiate and mediate allergic reactions.
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