About 1-in-8 anaphylaxis cases thought to be caused by medications

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC
Photo by Pixelumina Photography on Unsplash
Photo by Pixelumina Photography on Unsplash

Around one-in-eight anaphylaxis cases reported in Victoria are likely to be caused by medications, according to Aussie research. Victoria has begun recording and analysing anaphylaxis events in the state, with 4,273 episodes reported from November 2018 to December 2020. Foods were the highest cause of episodes, accounting for nearly two-thirds, with one-in-12 attributed to insect venoms and one-in-25 to other causes. Antimicrobial drugs, non-steroid anti-inflammatories, penicillin and cephalosporins made up the bulk of medication-related episodes.

Media release

From: Medical Journal of Australia

ANAPHYLAXIS: MEDICATIONS IMPLICATED IN 12% OF CASES

MEDICATIONS were implicated in 12% of Victorian public and private emergency department presentations with anaphylaxis, according to research published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

“From 1 November 2018, the Victorian Department of Health Department of Health and Human Services listed anaphylaxis as a notifiable condition,” wrote the authors, led by Dr George Drewett, an infectious diseases registrar at Austin Health.

That ruling allowed the incidence, causes, and characteristics of anaphylaxis to be analysed for the first time.
Drewett and colleagues reviewed all cases of anaphylaxis reported to the Victorian Department of Health during 1 November 2018 – 31 December 2020.

“A total of 4273 anaphylaxis episodes were reported (females: 2292 cases, 54%); the overall anaphylaxis rate was 31.9 episodes per 100 000 person-years. The most frequently reported causes were foods (2659 cases, 62%); drugs were implicated in 533 cases (12%), insect venoms in 342 (8%), and other causes in 144 (4%). No deaths were recorded,” they reported.

"The median age in cases of food-related anaphylaxis was 17 years; and 45 years in cases of drug-related anaphylaxis.
“Hospitalisation was required by 1538 patients (36%) and intensive care by 111 (2.6%; 7% of people admitted to hospital).

“Antimicrobial drugs were implicated in 258 cases of drug-related anaphylaxis (48%) and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in 85 cases (16%). Penicillin-class agents were implicated in 143 cases of antimicrobial-related anaphylaxis (56%), cephalosporins in 80 cases (31%).”

Drewett and colleagues wrote that their findings were “largely consistent” with those of a retrospective multicentre cohort study in tertiary Australian hospitals during 2010–2015.

“Our study provides a unique analysis of drug- and antimicrobial-related anaphylaxis, for which prospective data are scarce; many studies have been based upon retrospective analyses of hospital stays,” they concluded.

“Understanding the reasons for and the outcomes of drug-related anaphylaxis in Australia could improve decisions about prescribing and treatment.”

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The Medical Journal of Australia is a publication of the Australian Medical Association.

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