Prospective audit of adverse reactions occurring in 459 primary antibody-deficient patients receiving intravenous immunoglobulin

Author:

BRENNAN V M1,SALOMÉ-BENTLEY N J1,CHAPEL H M1,Abbey Jane2,Askew Tracey3,Cochrane Sheila4,Fletcher Claire5,Bennett Claire5,Freud Cilla6,Ryan Annie6,Haines Mary7,Powell Pauline8,Saunderson Delene9,Short Jan10,Toolan John11,Hendry Doreen12,Wilkes Ann13,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Immunology, Oxford Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford UK

2. Great Ormond Street Hospital

3. Teresa Green Newcastle General Hospital

4. Hope Hospital, Salford

5. Birmingham Heartlands Hospital

6. Royal Free Hospital, London

7. Royal Brompton, London

8. Queens Medical Centre, Nottingham

9. Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast

10. St. Helier Hospital, Carshalton

11. St. James's Hospital, Leeds

12. Oxford

13. Southmead BTS, Bristol

Abstract

SUMMARY Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is used as the standard replacement therapy for patients with primary antibody deficiencies. A previous study of adverse reactions in patients self-infusing at home over 1 year showed an overall reaction rate of 0·7%. A larger prospective study is reported here, involving a greater number of immunology centres and including children and adults who received infusions from medical or nursing staff as well as those self-infusing. Four hundred and fifty-nine patients were entered into this study and 13 508 infusions were given. The study showed that no severe reactions occurred and the reaction rate was low at 0·8%. This figure could have been lower, 0·5%, if predisposing factors responsible for some reactions had been considered before infusion. In conclusion, the study shows the importance of ongoing training for patients and staff to recognize the predisposing factors to prevent avoidable reactions. Because none of these reactions were graded as severe, the present guidance to prescribe self-injectable adrenaline for patients infusing outside hospital should be reviewed.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

Reference8 articles.

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