Correcting a common, costly misconception about penicillin allergies

Beata Wyatt, MD, Hospital Medicine, is Lutheran’s physician champion for a new enterprise-wise initiative, Penicillin Allergy Delabeling using the PEN-FAST Calculator, recently approved as a standardized best practice to safely remove incorrect allergy labels from patient charts.

“As hospitalists, we are one of the main providers prescribing antibiotics in the hospital. Many of our patients have penicillin listed as an allergy, making us choose broad spectrum antibiotics, often IV instead of PO, when otherwise it would be unnecessary, increasing the cost, exposure to broad spectrum antibiotics and risk for future resistant infections, and often prolonging the hospital stay,” Wyatt said. “A lot of these patients do not have true high-risk allergy, and with this initiative we can prevent many of these situations and be better advocates for our patients and our hospital resources.”

In fact, more than 90% of reported penicillin allergies are not true allergies. Penicillin delabeling is a high-value, low-risk intervention that improves care quality and reduces harm to patients and organizational and patient costs.

How does the delabeling process work using the PEN-FAST Calculation?

  1. Risk assessment: A healthcare professional reviews the history of the reaction to determine risk.

    • PEN-FAST score of < 3 points equals low‑risk: Low probability of a positive penicillin oral challenge test (<5% risk)

  2. Direct oral challenge: For low-risk patients, a single dose of amoxicillin is administered in a hospital setting to verify tolerance.

  3. Removal: If the patient tolerates the oral challenge, the allergy label is removed from the medical record, and the patient is notified.

“I am very excited about this much needed simple, effective and not-expensive initiative that will save many patients from unnecessary medications, which would place them at risk for the resistant organisms, prolonged hospital stays and increased cost of care,” Wyatt said. 

Epic workflow support

Epic supports the penicillin allergy delabeling process through standardized pharmacist workflows. Pharmacists document the PEN‑FAST score in the Pharmacy Minimum Data flowsheet, which can then be pulled directly into the allergy comments using the smart phrase .rxpenfast.

Patients who meet low‑risk criteria based on the PEN‑FAST score are eligible for evaluation using the Intermountain Penicillin Allergy Challenge order set, supporting safe delabeling when clinically appropriate. 

Patient education resources

Penicillin allergy fact sheets:

English
Spanish

Patient safety and outcomes

  • Alternative antibiotics carry:

    • 2–3 times higher risk of C. difficile

    • Higher rates of acute kidney injury and drug toxicity

    • Less effective treatment for common infections

  • Delabeling enables narrower, first‑line, guideline‑recommended therapy with better efficacy and fewer side effects

  • Unconfirmed allergy labels lead to the use of broader-spectrum antibiotics, which can cause increased side effects, antibiotic resistance, and poorer health outcomes

Cost and impact

  • $1,500–$4,000 savings per inpatient by avoiding higher cost alternative antibiotics, reducing length of stay, and reducing antibiotic-related and infection-related complications

  • One‑time delabeling provides lifelong benefit across future encounters

What this means for daily practice

  • Simpler antibiotic choices for hospitalists, nurses, and pharmacists

  • More accurate allergy lists and safer medication administration

  • Strong alignment with antimicrobial stewardship, quality, and value‑based care goals

Additional resources

More information is available on the Antimicrobial Stewardship website.

Questions? Contact Wyatt,Whitney Buckel, PharmD, or Robert Silge, MD.

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