Original Research

Prevalence of Antibiotic Allergy at a Spinal Cord Injury Center

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Conclusions

Almost 30% of patients with SCI had a recorded allergy to at least 1 antibiotic. The most common allergy was to penicillin, which is similar to what has previously been reported for the general adult US population. However, only 12% of those with a penicillin allergy were considered high risk of true allergic reactions. Consequently, there are opportunities to examine whether approaches to confirm true reactions (such as skin testing) would help to mitigate unnecessary avoidance of certain antibiotic classes due to mild ADRs, rather than a true allergy, in persons with SCI. This would be an important effort to combat both individual safety concerns and the public health crisis of antibiotic resistance. Given the available evidence, it is reasonable for SCI health care practitioners to discuss the potential risks and benefits of allergy testing with patients with SCI; this maintains a patient-centered approach that can ensure judicious use of antibiotics when necessary.

Acknowledgments

This material is based on work supported (or supported in part) with resources and the use of facilities at the James A. Haley Veterans’ Hospital

Pages

Recommended Reading

CDC backs FDA’s call for second COVID booster for those at high risk
Federal Practitioner
Dried blood spot test validated for HIV, hep B, and hep C
Federal Practitioner
Diagnosis by dog: Canines detect COVID in schoolchildren with no symptoms
Federal Practitioner
FMT in a pill: FDA approves second product to prevent C. diff recurrence
Federal Practitioner
UTI imaging falls short in some primary care settings
Federal Practitioner
White House to end COVID vaccine mandate for federal workers
Federal Practitioner
New outbreaks of Marburg virus disease: What clinicians need to know
Federal Practitioner
FDA approves first RSV vaccine for older adults
Federal Practitioner
COVID-19 and psoriasis: Is there a link?
Federal Practitioner
Clinic responsible for misdiagnosing newborn’s meningitis, must pay millions
Federal Practitioner