Challenge testing should only be done at specialist discretion. This involves the deliberate administration of a cephalosporin, usually in graded dosage. It should be carried out under expert supervision in a centre with facilities to manage acute allergic reactions. It is the gold standard test for patients with a history of allergy to a cephalosporin.
Testing with a drug putatively linked to a previous reaction (homologous challenge) is warranted when there is an indication to use the drug, if there is significant uncertainty about the history, or if the reaction occurred in the distant past. In low-risk cases (mild reactions, history suggesting index reaction intolerance rather than allergy), oral rechallenge without prior skin testing can be considered to facilitate delabelling.
A history of a severe delayed-type 4 hypersensitivity reaction (Stevens-Johnson syndrome/toxic epidermal necrolysis, drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms) is considered a permanent contraindication to challenge testing since the T-cell immunological memory is likely to persist.22 A history of immediate allergy and even anaphylaxis is not an absolute contraindication to (cautious) challenge since type 1 allergy frequently resolves over several years21,23 and a negative challenge clears the drug for future use.
When the index drug is known, and is found positive on sIgE blood test, skin prick or intradermal testing, then the challenge is done with an alternative cephalosporin with a different R1 side chain (heterologous challenge) as this may show the absence of cross-reactive allergy. In the event of severe anaphylaxis to a specific cephalosporin, the specialist may opt to challenge with an alternative beta-lactam, despite negative in vitro and in vivo testing (Fig. 3). For a patient labelled with ‘cephalosporin allergy’ in which the index cephalosporin is not known, a cautious challenge may be warranted with the cephalosporin that is most likely to be useful.