Hypersensitivity reactions to chemotherapy: an EAACI Position Paper

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessTarih
2021Yazar
Pagani, MauroBavbek, Sevim
Alvarez-Cuesta, Emilio
Dursun, Adile Berna
Bonadonna, Patrizia
Castells, Mariana
Cernadas, Josefina
Chiriac, Anca
Sahar, Hamadi
Madrigal-Burgaleta, Ricardo
Sanchez-Sanchez, Soledad
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Pagani, M., Bavbek, S., Alvarez-Cuesta, E., Berna Dursun, A., Bonadonna, P., Castells, M., Cernadas, J., Chiriac, A., Sahar, H., Madrigal-Burgaleta, R., & Sanchez Sanchez, S. (2022). Hypersensitivity reactions to chemotherapy: an EAACI Position Paper. Allergy, 77(2), 388–403. https://doi.org/10.1111/all.15113Özet
Chemotherapeutic drugs have been widely used in the treatment of cancer disease
for about 70 years. The development of new treatments has not hindered their use,
and oncologists still prescribe them routinely, alone or in combination with other antineoplastic agents. However, all chemotherapeutic agents can induce hypersensitivity reactions (HSRs), with different incidences depending on the culprit drug. These
reactions are the third leading cause of fatal drug-induced anaphylaxis in the United
States. In Europe, deaths related to chemotherapy have also been reported. In particular, most reactions are caused by platinum compounds, taxanes, epipodophyllotoxins and asparaginase. Despite their prevalence and relevance, the ideal pathways
for diagnosis, treatment and prevention of these reactions are still unclear, and practice remains considerably heterogeneous with vast differences from center to center.
Thus, the European Network on Drug Allergy and Drug Allergy Interest Group of
the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology organized a task force to
provide data and recommendations regarding the allergological work-up in this field
of drug hypersensitivity reactions. This position paper aims to provide consensus on the investigation of HSRs to chemotherapeutic drugs and give practical recommendations for clinicians that treat these patients, such as oncologists, allergologists and
internists. Key sections cover risk factors, pathogenesis, symptoms, the role of skin
tests, in vitro tests, indications and contraindications of drug provocation tests and
desensitization of neoplastic patients with allergic reactions to chemotherapeutic
drugs. Statements, recommendations and unmet needs were discussed and proposed
at the end of each section