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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results for urticaria

  1. Omalizumab for previously treated chronic spontaneous urticaria (TA339)

    Evidence-based recommendations on omalizumab (Xolair) for treating severe chronic spontaneous urticaria in people of 12 and over.

  2. Chronic urticaria: off-label doses of cetirizine (ESUOM31)

    Summary of the evidence on off-label doses of cetirizine for chronic urticaria (hives) to inform local NHS planning and decision-making

  3. CT-P39 (omalizumab biosimilar) for previously treated chronic spontaneous urticaria [TSID11832]

    Topic prioritisation

  4. Remibrutinib for treating chronic spontaneous urticaria inadequately controlled by H1-antihistamines ID6356

    In development Reference number: GID-TA11416 Expected publication date:  08 July 2026

  5. Drug allergy: diagnosis and management (CG183)

    This guideline covers diagnosing and managing drug allergy in all age groups. It aims to make it easier for professionals to tell when someone is having an allergic reaction, by specifying the key signs and patterns to look out for. It also makes recommendations on improving people’s understanding of their drug allergies, and ensuring these are recorded properly in their medical records.

  6. Food allergy in under 19s: assessment and diagnosis (CG116)

    This guideline covers assessing and managing food allergy in children and young people under 19. It aims to improve symptoms such as faltering growth and eczema by offering advice on how to identify food allergy and when to refer to secondary or specialist care.

  7. Remibrutinib for treating chronic inducible urticaria inadequately controlled by H1-antihistamines [ID6742]

    Awaiting development Reference number: GID-TA11968 Expected publication date: TBC

  8. Drug allergy (QS97)

    This quality standard covers diagnosing and managing drug allergy in adults, young people and children. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement.

  9. Natalizumab for treating rapidly evolving severe relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (TA127)

    Evidence-based recommendations on natalizumab (Tysabri) for treating rapidly evolving severe relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis in adults.

  10. Insect bites and stings: antimicrobial prescribing (NG182)

    This guideline sets out an antimicrobial prescribing strategy for insect and spider bites and stings in adults, young people and children aged 72 hours and over, including those that occurred while travelling outside the UK. It aims to limit antibiotic use and reduce antibiotic resistance.

  11. Remsima (infliximab biosimilar) for subcutaneous injection for managing rheumatoid arthritis (ES29)

    Summary of the evidence on remsima (infliximab biosimilar) for subcutaneous injection for managing rheumatoid arthritis

  12. Remibrutinib for treating chronic spontaneous urticaria inadequately controlled by H1-antihistamines in people 12 to 17 years [ID6649]

    Awaiting development Reference number: GID-TA11861 Expected publication date: TBC

  13. Ligelizumab for previously treated chronic spontaneous urticaria in people 12 years and over [ID3999]

    Discontinued Reference number: GID-TA10891

  14. Infliximab for acute exacerbations of ulcerative colitis (TA163)

    Evidence-based recommendations on infliximab (Remicade) for treating acute exacerbations of severely active ulcerative colitis in adults.

  15. Atopic eczema in under 12s: diagnosis and management (CG57)

    This guideline covers diagnosing and managing atopic eczema in children under 12. It aims to improve care for children with atopic eczema by making detailed recommendations on treatment and specialist referral. The guideline also explains how healthcare professionals should assess the effect eczema has on quality of life, in addition to its physical severity.