ALPHA-GAL SYNDROME AND INCREASED RISK OF EARLY ADVERSE REACTIONS
Practice implication: Alpha-gal Syndrome is not a contraindication to antivenom when envenomation is life or limb threatening but warrants pre-treatment with epinephrine and up-tiering of risk management (infusion strategy, ICU capable monitoring, product selection). There are NO absolute contraindications to antivenom for a patient with a significant symptomatic envenomation).
Early but compelling clinical evidence suggests that patients with Alpha-Gal syndrome (a mammalian meat allergy) may experience higher rates of reaction in response to antivenoms due to conservation of the alpha-gal epitope in mammalian antibody proteins. Some early studies from the United States indicated higher rates of reactions with with the F(ab’)2 Anavip versus CroFab which is a F(ab), but other studies have shown that patients who reacted to CroFab tolerated Anavip.274–276 Regardless, pretreatment should be considered for patients with elevated risk factors (patient from high prevalence area, medical Hx suspicious for alpha-gal, etc) and in patients with known or suspected alpha-gal syndrome. If both CroFab and Anavip are available for a CONUS bite with a known history or high risk of alpha-gal, it may be worth discussing CroFab as first line if available due to possible lower risk of reaction with a medical toxicologist. If a patient had a reaction to CroFab or Anavip CONUS, it may be worth discussing switching to the alternative product with a medical toxicologist.
While additional research is needed, the key points are as follows: