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Services available and accessing services
Outpatient clinics
Outpatient clinics are based at the Royal Victoria Infirmary (RVI). Clinics are held Monday – Friday. Referrals from GPs should be sent by e-referral. Referrals are screened by a Consultant and patients are booked to be seen in problem-based clinics according to the identified clinical question.
Referrals from within the trust or other hospitals should be sent to the Immunology Department, Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 4LP or may be emailed / faxed after telephone contact with the secretaries on 0191 282 0669.
Referral for children
Referral for children (<16) are not accepted and should be sent to Paediatric Allergy or Paediatric Immunology teams at the Great North Children’s Hospital depending on the clinical condition. Advice and guidance can also be accessed via e-referral and most enquiries would be answered in 2 working days. For advice on patients already known to our service please contact the department on the above number. There is a separate pathway for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome.
Outreach clinics
Outreach clinics are currently only being held in the RVI. However we hope to be able to offer outreach services in the near future.
Who we are
We are a team of consultants, specialist nurses, junior doctors and nursing staff supported by a dietitian, health care assistant, receptionists and secretarial staff.
Details of key staff members are available on the Newcastle Hospitals Allergy and Immunology webpage
Helpful information
Click here to visit the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology website Click here to visit the anaphylaxis website Click here to visit the Allergy UK website Click here to visit the British Society for Allergy & Clinical Immunology website Click here to visit the JEXT website Click here to visit the epipen website Click here to visit the NICE websiteInformation for patients
‘What to expect at your first appointment’ booklets will be sent to patients with their appointments.
What to refer
For examples please see the table below – numbers in brackets refer to the numbered notes.
What to refer* | What not to refer* |
Immunotherapy | |
Known or suspected primary immunodeficiency (1) | HIV/AIDS (2) |
Recurrent major infection (3) | Recurrent minor infection (4) |
Recurrent severe boils [failed initial therapy; deep seated abscesses] (5) | Recurrent superficial abscess / boil; hidradenitis suppurativa (5) |
Unexplained periodic fevers / autoinflammatory conditions | Vasculitis/Connective tissue disease (6); Arthritis (7) |
Congenital asplenia (8) | Non-congenital asplenia (8) |
Hereditary angioedema / acquired angioedema secondary to C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency | Recurrent shingles (9) |
What to refer* | What not to refer* |
Allergy | |
Anaphylaxis (10) | Asthma (11) |
Recurrent angioedema in people NOT on ACE Inhibitors (12) | Angioedema in people taking ACE Inhibitors / Angiotensin receptor blockers (12); single episode of self-limiting angioedema |
Seasonal or perennial rhinoconjunctivitis resistant to maximal conventional therapy (13) | Eczema (14); Periorbital oedema with scaly rash (14) |
Venom allergy (15) | |
Drug allergy (16) | |
Latex allergy (17) | |
Food allergy (18) | Food intolerance; irritable bowel syndrome (18) |
Urticaria if severe and prolonged (19) | Urticaria if single episode, recent onset and/or mild (19) |
* See below for details and advice. If unsure whether to refer, please contact Department by telephone, fax or email or request Advice and Guidance via e-referral.
Notes
- Known or suspected primary immunodeficiency: all need to be under care of
Immunologist. - Refer all HIV/AIDS to Adult Infectious Disease Service at Royal Victoria Infirmary (or
to local Infectious Disease or GUM Service, outside of Newcastle) - Recurrent Major infection: please refer all of the following:
- Two major infections in 12 months (major = requires hospital admission).
- One major + 2 minor (minor = microbiologically proven and needs oral antibiotic) 3 in 12 months
- Second episode of bacterial meningitis ever
- Infections (major or minor) in relative of patient with known primary immunodeficiency.
- Patients with unexplained bronchiectasis and/or sinusitis.
- Recurrent minor viral infections will not be due to immunodeficiency and referral is not necessary: exclude stress, inadequate diet, iron deficiency.
- Recurrent boils/abscesses: most are due to staphylococcal carriage or local disease (hidradenitis suppurativa – refer to dermatology or plastic surgery). Rarely may be due to neutrophil or antibody deficiency. Check blood glucose, TFTs and nasal swabs for staphylococci. The Department has a regime for decontamination of staphylococcal carriers, available on request. Refer only those carriers who fail decontamination. Refer all patients with deep-seated abscesses (liver, brain).
- Acute vasculitis or connective tissue disease should be referred to Rheumatology.
- Acute arthritis should be referred to Rheumatology.
- Guidelines for the management of asplenia are available from our Department Refer only those patients who fail to respond to recommended vaccines, who cannot or will not tolerate continuous antibiotics, and those with congenital asplenia. Practices should maintain their own practice register of asplenic patients for annual follow-up.
- Recurrent ‘shingles’ is very rare in the absence of severe and obvious immunodeficiency (e.g. lymphoma, leukaemia, AIDS, chemotherapy) and the usual cause of recurrent lesions similar to shingles (VZV) is actually recurrent Herpes simplex infection. Treat with oral aciclovir (not topical). If episodes are very frequent, consider prophylaxis with aciclovir 200mg bd for 6 months.
- Refer all patients with anaphylaxis (= allergic reaction with systemic features, hypotension, laryngospasm, bronchospasm).
See NICE Guideline: http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG134 - Refer difficult to control asthma to Respiratory Medicine. Severe asthma is an exclusion criterion for immunotherapy.
- Angioedema may be caused by ACE inhibitors and Angiotensin II blockers (up to 5% of patients): stop drug and wait 3 months. Refer if angioedema persists. Other drugs causing angioedema include NSAIDs, PPIs and statins.
- Refer only patients with allergic rhinconjunctivitis who fail to respond to maximal medical therapy (oral anti-histamines + nasal steroid + eye drops). Ensure that nasal steroids are used with head forward looking at feet.
For management in primary care see BSACI primary care guideline: https://www.bsaci.org/Guidelines/allergicnon-allergic-rhinitis - Refer eczema and persistent periorbital oedema with scaling to Dermatology. In adults, food allergy rarely has a role to play in the generation of eczema. Investigation of dermatitis is by patch testing (available in Dermatology).
- Venom immunotherapy should be offered to patients who have had a severe systemic reaction to a sting, or who have had a moderate reaction with one or more risk factors (raised mast cell tryptase, significant anxiety about further stings or high risk of further stings).
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ta246 - Refer patients with drug allergy only if clinically relevant and where testing will alter treatment.
See NICE Guidelines on referring drug allergy from primary care:
http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg183/chapter/1-Recommendations#nonspecialistmanagement-and-referral-to-specialist-services-2
Patients with penicillin allergy should only be referred where there is an ongoing need for a penicillin antibiotic or where the allergy is associated with allergy to other antibiotics.
Refer patients with reactions to NSAIDS only where there is a clear ongoing need for this class of drugs. True IgE-mediated allergy to local anaesthetics is very rare. We do not normal recommend the carriage of adrenaline autoinjectors in drug-related reactions as medications can be avoided. A medic-Alert bracelet (or equivalent) is advisable. - Refer all patients with significant immediate allergy to latex.Contact eczema to rubber should be referred to Dermatology for patch testing.
- Refer all patients with known or suspected allergic reactions to foods. Some patients may have been told that they have multiple food allergies after high street ‘allergy’ tests: many of these tests are unscientific: refer for further testing only those in whom correct testing will help them come to terms with chronic symptoms e.g. irritable bowel. Non-specific symptoms are virtually never due to true food allergy.
- Chronic urticaria is rarely due to allergy. Most is due to physical urticaria (pressure, heat etc.), stress, chronic infection (dental, sinus, helicobacter, cholecystitis), and thyroid dysfunction; some may be spontaneous and can be affected by the former conditions.
Vitamin & mineral deficiency (B12, folate, ferritin, vitamin D can all exacerbate symptoms in some patients .Exclude these before referral. Do not refer patients with a single or short-lived episode of urticaria.
Management of urticaria may require use of doses of anti-histamines in excess of those normally recommended in the BNF: use cetirizine in does up to 40 mg per day or fexofenadine 360 mg bd in resistant cases; addition of monteleukast 10 mg od is also recommended in Guidelines. Do not use continuous steroids.
Do not use Piriton (chlorphenamine) during the daytime or for acute use (weak anti-histamine, short duration of action and sedating). BSACI guidelines on managing Chronic spontaneous urticaria can be found at:- https://www.bsaci.org/guidelines/chronicurticaria-and-angioedema. - Referral guidelines for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome are available in e-referral.