Title: Part II: Contact Dermatitis
1Part II Contact Dermatitis Drug Eruptions
- Andrews Chapter 6
- JoAnne M.LaRow, D.O.
2Drug Reactions
- Adverse reactions occurs at low rate- 1/1000
exposures - Except for commonly used meds-semisynthetic
penicillins and sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim
30-50/1000 - Presence of HIV disease or EBV infection
increases rate - One of the most common reasons pts visit
dermatologist
3Pt evaluation
- Three rules
- 1.) stop all unnecessary meds
- 2.) ask about nonprescription meds and meds
delivered by other means-suppositories,eye drops,
implants, patches, etc - 3.) no matter how atypical the presentation
always consider pts meds as a possible cause
- Diagnose cutaneous eruption by clinical
pattern(ie urticaria, exanthem, vasculitis,
erythema multiforme, etc) - Ask two questions
- 1.) which med can cause this pattern of rxn?
- 2.) how commonly does this med cause this rxn
pattern?
4Additional testing?
- Skin testing is most useful in evaluating type I
(immediate) hypersensitivity - Skin testing is most frequently used in
evaluating adverse rxns to penicillin, local
anesthetics, insulin, and vaccines
- Radioallergosorbent (RAST) tests have 20
false-neg rate in penicillin type I allergy - Therefore RAST must be followed by skin testing
- RAST test cannot replace skin testing
5Pathogenesis
- The pts metabolism of medication may determine
the likelihood of a rxn occurring - As in anticonvulsant and sulfonamide rxns, the
P-450 system of individuals generates toxic
metabolites of the med that binds to proteins and
stimulates an immunologic rxn - This defect can be found in family members and is
linked to HLA subtypes - Immune status and clinical condition may be a
factor- AIDS pts-may be related to glutathione
deficiency
- In most patterns pathogenesis is UNKOWN!!
- Drug rxns are often nonimmunologic
- May result from normal pharmacologic effects of
drug- ie urticaria worsening from aspirin
ingestion - Rxns may be immunologic, based on an immune
response by the pt to the drug or its matabolite
6Exanthems
- Commonest form of adverse cutaneous eruption
- Characterized by erythema, often with papules
throughout - Tend to occur within the first two weeks of tx,
but may occur later, even up to 10 days after tx - Lesions first appear proximally-especially groin
and axilla, generalizing within 1-2 days - Pruritus is usually prominent-a distinguishing
factor from a viral exanthem
- Most common cause of this rxn pattern-antibiotics,
especially semi-synthetic penicillins
sulfamethoxazole/trimethopirm - Ampicillin given during infectious mononucleosis
and Bactrim given to AIDS pts cause exanthems in
a large of pts treated - Morbilliform rxns to amoxicillin are likely
mediated by helper T cells similar to ACD and
tuberculin rxns
7Exanthems
- Morbilliform drug eruption caused by sulfonamide
8Exanthems
9Treatment
- Simple exanthems-supportive tx
- Eruption may resolve even if offending med is
continued - Topical steroidal medications and antihistamines
may allow course of tx to be completed - Rechallenge may or may not result in reappearance
of eruption - In HIV infection and rarely, in persons with
normal immune status rechallenge may result in a
more severe blistering rxn
- Complex exanthems or hypersensitivity syndromes
are seen mostly with anticonvulsants, and
long-acting sulfonamides less commonly with
allopurinol, gold, dapsone, and sorbinil - These present with fever, rash, and variably ,
with eosinophilia, lymphadenopathy, hepatitis,
nephritis, and rarely heart, lung brain
10Anticonvulsant Hypersensitivity Syndrome
- Can be seen with-diphenylhydantoin,
phenobarbital, carbamazepine, and other
anticonvulsants - Eruption may occur in as many as 1 of 5000 pts tx
with these meds
- Skin eruption is typically initially
morbilliform, but may have various morphologies
in different pts at different times - Histologic picture is compatible with clinical
morphology - Syndrome begins with fever between 2 and 6 weeks
after agent is started - Eruption begins with prominent facial swelling
11Anticonvulsant HypersensitivitySyndrome
- Associated findings pharyngitis,
lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly - Lab abnormalities eosinophilia, atypical
lymphocytosis, elevated liver function tests, and
occasionally nephritis - Untreated pts can lead to death from hepatitis
- Pathogenesis is an inability to detoxify arene
oxide metabolites of these meds - Metabolites bind to proteins and elicit an immune
response leading to an adverse drug rxn - Cross-rxn with different anticonvulsants are
common (because meds are metabolized by same
pathway)
12Management
- Ruling other infectious etiologies
- Discontinue offending med
- Supportive tx
- If liver or renal involvement or pt is ill
requires hospitalization, systemic steroids may
be used
13Sulfonamide HypersensitivitySyndrome
- Clinical syndrome similar to anticonvulsants
- Pts develop severe bullous rxn like
Stevens-Johnson syndrome or TEN - Pts with this are almost always slow acetylators
who produce toxic hydroxylamine metabolites
during metabolism of the sulfonamide
14Allopurinol Hypersensitivity Syndrome
- Associated with the dermatitis is fever,
eosinophilia, sometimes hepatitis, and typically
worsening renal failure - Syndrome may be steroid responsive, but is slow
to resolve - Frequently lasts months after allopurinol has
been stopped - About 25 of pts die as a consequence
- Dialysis does not accelerate resolution of this
syndrome-
- Typically occurs in pts with preexisting renal
failure, whose dose is not adjusted for their
renal function - Weeks to months (average 7 weeks) after
allopurinol is begun, a morbilliform eruption
(50) that often evolves to an exfoliative
erythroderma(20) - Bullous eruptions including TENs may occur(25)
may occur
15- Exfoliative dermatitis caused by allopurinol
16Drug-Induced Pseudolymphoma
- T-cell receptor gene rearrangements in skin and
blood may be positive in these drug-induced cases - More rarely, meds may induce plaques or nodules,
usually in elderly white men after months of tx - Lymphadenopathy and circulating Szary cells may
also be present - Pseodolymphoma resolves with discontinuation of
the med - Primary meds responsibleanticonvulsants, sulfa
drugs, dapsone, and antidepressants
- True pseudolymphoma rxns are rare
- Histology must be consistent with the diagnosis
of lymphoma - Exposure to a med will result in cutaneous
inflammatory infiltrates that resemble lymphoma - Most frequently MF
- Usually other features like keratinocyte necrosis
and dermal edema help to distinguish these rxns
from true lymphoma
17Urticaria
18Urticaria
19Urticaria
20Urticaria
- Aspirin and nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs
are the most common cause of nonimmunologic
urticarial rxns - They alter prostaglandin metabolism, enhancing
degranulation of mast cells - They may also exacerbate chronic urticaria of
other causes - Nonacetylated salicylates(Trisisate and
salsalate) do not cross- react with aspirin in
pts experiencing bronchospasm and may be safe
alternatives
- Meds may induce urticaria by immunologic and
nonimmunologic mechanisms - Clinically lesions are wheals or angioedema
- Urticaria may be part of a more severe
anaphylactic rxn with bronchospasm, laryngospasm,
or hypotension - Immediate hypersensitivity skin testing and
sometimes RAST tests are useful in evaluating
risk for these patterns of rxn
21- Immunologic urticaria is most commonly associated
with penicillin and related beta-lactam
antibioics - It is associated with IgE antibodies to
penicillin or its metabolite - Skin testing is useful in evaluating pts with a
history of urticaria associated with penicillin
exposure - If pt is positive , an alternative antibiotic
must be considered , or pt may be given a
desensitization protocol
- Most pts with a history of penicillin
allergyare skin test neg - These pts ca be tx with a low liklihood of a
severe adverse event - Pts with pen allergy have an increased rate of
rxn to cephalosporins - Third-generation cephalosporins are much less
likely to induce a rxn in a pcn allergic pt than
the first- or second generation ones - In the case of Cefaclor, half of ana phylactic
rxns occur in pts with a history of pcn allergy
22- Angioedema is a known complication of the use of
ACE inhibitors - Blacks are nearly five times greater risk than
whites - Lisinopril and enalapril produce angioedema more
commonly than captopril - Episodes may reqire hospitalization 45 of the
time, ICU 27 of the time, and intubation 18 of
the time - One quarter of pts give a history of previous
angioedema - Captopril enhances the flare rxn around wheals
- Angioedema is dose dependent, as it may resolve
with decreased dose - These factors suggest that the angioedema may
represent a consequence of a normal pharmacologic
effect of the ACE inhibitors - Blocking of kininase II by ACE inhibitors may
increase tissue kinin levels, enhancing
urticarial rxns and angioedema - Although dose dependent, ACE inhibitor users with
one episode of angioedema have a ten-fold risk of
a second
23Angioedema
24Angioedema
25Photosensivity Reactions
- Meds may cause phototoxic (sunburn-like)
reactions, lichenoid reactions, pseudoporphyria - Most drug-induced photosensitivity is triggered
by radiation in the UVA range - Most common drugs implicated are NSAIDs,
sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprin, thiazide diuretics
and related sulfonylureas, quinine and quinidine,
and certain tetracyclines
- Phototoxic reactions are related to dose of both
med and UV irradiation - Does not require prior exposure or participation
by the immune system - Rxns can appear from hrs to days after to
exposure - Tetracyclines(especially demeclocyline),
amiodarone, and the NSAIDs are common culprits - Ts may include dose reduction and photoprotection
26- Amiodarone photosensitivity develops in 75 of tx
pts, and occurs after a cummulative dose of 40g - A reduced MED to UVA, but not UVB occurs, and
gradually returns to normal between 12 and 24
months after stopping the med - Stinging and burning may occur as soon as a half
hr after sun exposure - Clinically a dusky, blue-red erythema of face and
dorsa of the hands is most common, but a papular
rxn has been seen
- Photoallergic reactions are typically eczematous,
pruritic, and occur after some period of drug
exposure - They involve the immune system, and are confirmed
by positive photopatch testing - In general, they are not as drug dose dependent
as phototoxic reactions - Photosensivity both of the phototoxic and
photoallergic types may persist for some time
after the med has been d/cd
27- Desquamation, as seen following sunburn, is NOT
observed following amiodarone photosensitivity
rxns - NSAIDs, especially piroxicam are frequently
associated with phototsensitivity - Characteristic rxn is a vesicular eruption of
dorsa of hands, sometimes associated with
dyshidrosiform pattern on the lateral aspects of
hands and fingers - Pts with photosensitivity to piroxicam react on
initial exposure to the med
- These pts also react to thiosalicylic acid, a
common sensitizer in thimerosal - Half of pts having a positive patch test result
to thimerosal with no prior exposure to piroxicam
are photopatch test positive to piroxicam - This suggests that piroxicam rxns seen on
initial exposure to the med may be related to
prior sensitization during thimerosal exposure
28- Photodistributed kichenoid rxns have been
reported with thiazide diuretics, quinide, and
NSAIDs - They present with erythematous patches and
plaques - Sometimes, typical Wickhams stria are observed
in the lesions - Histologically, photodistributed lichenoid rxns
are often indistinquishable fron idiopathic
lichen planus
- Sulfonamide antibiotics, related hypoglycemic
agents, and the sulfonylurea diuretics may all be
associated with photoallergic rxns - These agents may all cross-react
- Also, pts may tolerate one of these meds, but
when another member is added, clinical
photosensitivity occurs - Typical pattern is erythema, scale, and in
chronic cases, lichenification and
hyperpigmentation
29Photoallergic Reactions
30- Other meds causing similar bullous rxns are
tetracycline, furosemide, nalidixic acid,
dapsone, nabumetone, and pyridoxine - Histologically, a pauci-inflammatory subepidermal
vesicle is sen - DIF may show IgG and complement deposition at the
d-e junction and perivascularly, as seen in PCT - The histo picture resembling cell poor
pemphigoid has resulted in these rxns being
reported as drug induced pemphigoid
- Pseudoporphyria is a photodistributed bullous rxn
clinically and histologically resembling
porphyria cutanea tarda - Hypertrichosis, skin fragility, dyspigmentation,
and sclerodermoid changes are not seen - Porphyrin studies are normal and the rxn resolves
on discontinuation of provoking med - Naproxen is most commonly reported cause
31Anticoagulant-Induced Skin Necrosis
- Both warfarin and heparin induce lesions of
cutaneous necrosis, but by different mechanisms - Obese, postmenopausal women are predispoded
secondary to the fact that lesions tend to occur
in areas with abundant subcutaneous fat(breast,
abdomen, or buttocks) - Warfarin necrosis occurs 3 5 days after therapy
is begun(the higher the initial dose, the higher
the risk)
- Lesions begin as red, painful plaques that become
necrotic - Hereditary or acquired deficiency of protein C
and less commonly protein S is associated - Persons are usually aysmptomatic heterozygotes
with protein C deficiency
32- Warfarin-induced necrosis
33(No Transcript)
34Vitamin K Reactions
- 1-2 weeks after injection of vitamin K, an
allergic reaction at the injection site may occur - Most affected pts have liver disease are being
tx for elevated PPTs - Lesions are pruritic, red plaques-deep-seated
involving the dermis and subcutaneous tissue - Occur most frequently on posterior arm and over
hip or buttocks - Plaques on hip tend to progress around the waist
and down thigh, forming a - cowboy gunbelt holster pattern
- Generalized eczematous small papules may occur on
other skin sites in severe rxns - Rxns usually persist for 1-3 weeks or may be
longer, they may resolve and reoccur - On testing, pts are positive on intradermal
testing to vit K, not to components of the
material - In Europe, another pattern of vit K has been
reported-subcutaneous sclerosis with or without
fasciitis appears at the site many months later
35- Allergic reaction at site of vitamin K injection
36Injection Site Reactions
- IM injection may produce a syndrome
called-embolia cutis medicamentosa or Nicolau
syndrome - Immediately after injection there is a local
intense pain, and ischemic palor - Within mins-hrs site develops an erythematous
macule that evolves into a livedoid violaceous
patch with dendrites - This becomes hemorrhagic, then ulcerates, and
eventually heals with an atrophic scar
- Cutaneous necrosis may occur at sites of med
injections - Two types
- 1.) those associated with IV infusions
- 2.) those related to IM injections
37- Muscle and liver enzymes may be elevated, and
neurologic symptoms and sequela occur in a third
of pts - Circulation of the limb may be affected, rarely
leading to amputation - Syndrome appears to be related to periarterial
injection leading to arterial thrombosis
- Tx-conservative-dressing changes, debridement,
bed rest, and pain control - Rarely surgical intervention is needed
38- Cutaneous reaction to IV infusion and
extravasation of chemotherapeutic agent
39Acute Generalized Exanthematous Pustulosis
- 90 of time is related to medication
- Not uncommon
- Sudden onset on eruption an average of 5 days
after med is started- about 50 of cases occur
within the first 24 hrs - Mercury is sole cause in 13 of cases in France,
beta-lactams in 44, and macrolides in 17 - Sulfonamides have NOT been reported to cause this
rxn
- 17 of pts have a h/o psoriasis
- Course and evolution are
- different from true pustular psoriasis, although
pts with psoriasis may be at increased risk for
this form of drug rxn
40- Initially there is a scarlatiniform erythema
- Eruption evolves and disseminates rapidly,
consisting of usually more than 100 nonfollicular
pustules less than 5 mm in diameter - Widespread desquamation occurs after a few days
- Edema of face, purpura, and target lesions may
appear in the background - Mucous membranes are involved in 22
- Fever is universal
- Neutrophilia in 90, and eosinophilia in 30
- Once inciting agent is discontinued or removed,
eruption usually resolves within 15 days without
sequelae - Patch tesing with the suspected agent may
reproduce a pustular eruption on an erythematous
base at 48 hrs
41Histology
- Early lesions show marked papillary edema,
neutrophil clusters in dermal papillae, and
perivascular eosinophils - May be an associated leukocytoclastic vasculitis
- Well developed lesions show intraepidermal or
subcorneal spongiform pustules - If there is a background of EM clinically, the
histology of EM may be superimposed - Presence of eosinophils, and marked papillary
edema help to distinguish this eruption from
pustular psoriasis
42Drug-Induced Pigmentation
- Chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, and quinacrine
all may cause a blue-black pigmentation of face,
extremities,ear cartilage, oral mucosa, and nails - Pretibial hyperpigmentation is most common
- Quinidine may also rarely cause this pattern
- Quinacrine is yellow and is concentrated in
epidermis - Generalized yellow discoloration of skin and
sclera
- Postinflammatory hyperpigmentation or actual
deposition of drug in skin - Minocycline causes three types of pigmentation
- 1.) blue-black discoloration in areas of prior
inflammation(not rel ated total or daily dose
exposure) - 2.)appearance of a similar-colored pigmentation
on normal skin of anterior shims(is dose
dependent) - 3.) least common-total generalized, muddy brown
hyperpigmentation,
43- Amiodarone after 3-6 months causes
photosensitivity in 30-57 of pts tx - 1-10 of pts a slate-gray hyperpigmentation
develops in areas of photosensitivity - Pigmentation fades after med is discontinued
- Clofazimine tx reproducibly causes a pink
discoloration that gradually becomes reddish blue
or brown concentrated in lesions of Hansens
disease - This pigmentation is disfiguring and a major
cause of noncompliance
- Zidovudine causes a blue or brown
hyperpigmentation most frequently in nails - Lunula may be blue, or whole nail plate may be
dark brown - Diffuse hyperpigmentation of skin, pigmentation
lateral tongue, and increased tanning are less
common - Occurs in darkly pigmented pts, is dose
dependent, clears after med discontinued
44- Purple pigmentation in patient who had been on
high doses of chlorpromazine - There is sparing of deep creases of the face
45- Chlorpromazine, thioridazine, imipramine, and
clomipramine may cause a slate-gray
hyperpigmentation in sun-exposed areas after long
periods of ingestion - Frequently, corneal and lens opacities are
present - Therefore all pts with hyperpigmentation from
these meds should have ophthalmologic exam - Pigmentation from phenothiazines fades gradually
over yrs - Corneal, but not lenticular changes resolve
- Heavy metals gold, silver, and bismuth produce
blue to slate-gray hyperpigmentation - Pigmentation occurs after yrs of exposure, mainly
in sun-exposed areas - It is permanent
- Bismuth also pigments gingival margin
- Arsenical melanosis is characterized by black,
generalized pigmentation or by pronounced truncal
hyperpigmentation that spares the face
46Fixed Drug Reactions
- Common
- Named such because they recur at same site with
each exposure to med - Six or less lesions occur frequently only one
- Present anywhere on body(50 occur on oral and
genital mucosa) - Represent 2 of all genital ulcers evaluated at
clinics for STDs
- Clinically begin as a red patch that soon evolves
to an iris or target lesion identical to EM - Eventually may even blister and erode
- Lesions of oral mucosa and genitalia usually
present as erosions - Characteristically, prolonged or permanent
postinflammatory hyperpigmentation results
47Fixed Drug Eruption
48- Unknown pathogenesis
- Persons with fixed drug eruptions to pyrazole
derivatives are much more likely to be HLA-B22
pos - Occasionally fixed drug rxns do not result in
long-lasting hyperpigmentation - The so-called nonpigmented fixed drug eruption is
distinctive - It is characterized by large, tender, often
symmetrical erythematous plaques that resolve
completely within weeks, only to recur on
reingestion of offending drug
- Meds inducing fixed drug eruptions are usually
those taken intermittently - Many NSAIDs, especially pyrazolone derivatives,
naproxen, mefenamic acid sulfonamides,
trimethoprim, or combination are responsible
mainly - Barbiturates, tetracyclines, phenolphthalein(in
laxatives), and erythromycin
49- Pseudoephedrine hydrochloride is by far most
common culprit of nonpigmented fixed drug
eruption - There is the so-called baboon syndrome where
the buttocks, groin, and axilla are
preferentially involved in this category
50Bullous Drug Reactions
- Skin blistering may complicate drug rxns in
numerous ways - The term bullous drug reaction most commonly
refers to a drug rxn in the EM group - Uncommon-0.4- 1.2 per million person for TEN a
1.2 to 6.0 per million person yrs for
Stevens-Johnson syndrome drug-induced EM is
usually more extensive than that induced by
infectious agents
- Exact definitions of SJS and TEN remain
arbitrary as a result of overlap in some cases - SJS lt 10 of body surface area involved, cases
with 10-30 are overlap cases, and 30
involvement is TEN - Others classify SJS as cases that begin with
skin pain and simple erythema rapidly followed by
skin loss
51EM SJS TEN
- Although definitions remain controversial, SJS
and TEN are probably a disease spectrum based on
the following most commonly induced by the same
meds pts initially presenting with SJS may
progress to extensive skin loss resembling TEN
histology is indistinguishable both are
increased by same magnitude in HIV infection
identical metabolic abnormalities are identified
in cases induced by sulfonamides or anticonvulants
- gt 100 meds have been reported as a cause
- Most commontrimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole(1-3/100,
000), Fansidar-R, sulfadoxine pluspyrimethamine(10
/100,000), and carbamazepine(14/100,000) - Antibiotics(especially long-acting sulfa drugs
and penicillins), other anticonvulsants,
antiinflammatories, and allopurinol are also
causes
52- Fever and influenza-like symptoms often procede
the eruption - Skin lesions appear on face and trunk and spread
rapidly (within 4 days) to their maximum extent - Initial lesions are macular and remain so,
followed by desquamation, or may form atypical
targets with purpuric centers that coalesce, form
bullae, the slough - Virtually always more than two mucosal surfaces
are also eroded, the oral and conjunctiva being
most frequently affected
- There may be difficulty with swallowing,
photophobia, painful urination, and extensive
respiratory and alimentary tract involvement - Skin bx usually performed to exclude other
diseases - Independent of extent of slough, clinical
morphology or the clinical diagnosis the
histology is alike - Paraneoplastic pemphigus also shows changes of EM
and must be excluded with DIF - Pts with graft-versus host disease may also be
alike
53Histology
- A lymphocytic infiltrate at the D-E junction
- Necrosis of keratinocytes that may be full
thickness - Infiltrate may be marked or very scant
54Histology
- Subepidermal separation
- Full thickness epidermal necrosis
55Management
- One recent report of IVIG in 10 pts in doses up
to 0.75 g/kg/day for 4 days led to response in 48
hrs and skin healing within 1 week - No adverse rxns where observed
- MOA of IVIG in this condition was blocking
apoptosis through blockade of the death receptor
FAS(CD 95) - Immunsuppressive therapy is very controversial
- Similar to an extensive burn
- They suffer fluid and electolyte imbalances,
bacteremia from loss of protective skin barrier,
hypercatabolism, and sometimes ARDS - Survival is improved if tx in a burn unit
- Pts who are very ill or have gt 30- 50 loss of
epidermis should be transferred to burn unit
56- Benefit of immunosuppresives is to stop the
process very quickly to reduce the ultimate
amount of skin lost - Once most of skin loss has occurred,
immunosuppresives only add to morbidity and
perhaps mortality - If considering immunosuppressive therapy it
should be done quickly, in adequate doses, given
a short trial to see if the process can be
arrested, and then tapered rapidly
- As with burns, the hosts age, severity of
underlying disease, and extent of skin loss are
the most important factors determining the
outcome rather than the use of immunosuppressive
agents - In pts who survive, the average time for
epidermal regrowth is 3 weeks - Most common sequelae are ocular scarring and
vision loss - A sicca like syndrome may also result
57EM
58- Erythema multiforme bullosum
- Note predilection for arms, sparing the trunk
unlike
59EM/TEN/SJS
60TEN
- Desquamation in sheets-leaving raw, red surface
61SJS
62Radiation-Induced EM
- Erythema and edema initally on the head in the
radiation ports, as dose of steroids is being
reduced - Evolves over 1-2 days to lesions clinically and
histologically similar to EM - Eruption spreads caudad and mucosal involvemant
may occur - Can rarely be seen with radiation therapy alone,
but is more common if phenytoin is administered
- Occurs if phenytoin is given prophylactically in
neurosurgical pts who are receiving whole-brain
radiation therapy and systemic steroids
63Urticarial EM
- Unusual rxn virtually always associated with
antibiotic ingestion - Skin lesions consist of urticarial papules and
plaques, some of which clear centrally forming
annular lesions,but no true iris lesions - Lesions can be distinguished from true urticaia
in that they are fixed for days - Pruritis is common
- Bullae are absent, and mucous membranes are
uninvolved
- Rarely, hypotension may occur
- Histologically, there is a superficial and deep
dermal infiltrate containing eosinophils with
dermal edema - Epidermis is not involved
- Response to systemic steroids is dramatic, with
clearing in 48-72 hrs
64HIV Disease and Drug Reactions
- If dermatitis is tx limiting, but eruption is not
life threatening, low-dose rechallenge/desensitiza
tion may be attempted - It is successful in 65-85 of pts short term,
and gt50 long term - Most rxns occur in first few days of
rechallenge, adverse rxns may appear months
after restatring drug - MOA?? Many AIDS pts are slow acetylators
- Severe bullous rxns-SJS, TEN are 100-1000 times
more common
- HIV-infected pts, especially those with helper
T-cell counts between 25 and 200, are at
increased risk for development of adverse rxns
to meds - Morbilliform rxns to Bactrim occurs in 45of
AIDS pts - Associated hepatitis or neutropenia may require
discontinuation of drug - A similar increased risk is seen in HIV pts
receiving Augmentin
65Adverse Reactions to Chemotherapeutic Agents
66Radiation Enhancement Recall Reactions
- Radiation dermatitis in form of intense erythema
and vesiculation may be observed in radiation
ports - Administration of many chemotherapeutic agents,
during or in close proximity to time of radiation
therapy, may enhance this rxn - It is termed radiation recall because it may
occur a week or more after radiation therapy
- A similar rxn of reactivation of a sunburn after
methotrexate therapy also occurs - This probably represents synergistic toxicity
reactions
67Chemo-induced acral erythema
- Common syndrome induced most frequently by
5-florouracil, doxorubicin, cystosine arabinoside - Rxn may occur in as many as 40 of tx pts
- Rxn is dose dependent
- May appear with bolus short-term infusions or
low-dose, long-term infusions - May present weeks to months after txs are started
- May present days to months after treatments are
started - Likely a direct toxic effect of chemotherapeutic
agents on the skin - Large number of sweat glands on the palms and
soles that may concentrate the chemotherapeutic
agent explaining the localization of the toxicity
68- Blisters developing over pressure areas is a
variant - Pts usually recover without complications
- Although rarely, full thickness ischemic
necrosis occurs in areas of blistering - Histology is nonspecific
- Most cases require only local supportive care
- Cold compresses and elevation are helpful
cooling of hands during tx may reduce severity of
rxn - Modification of dose decreases the pain of
fluorouracil induced syndrome
- Initial manifestation is often dysesthesia or
tingling of the palms and soles - This is followed by painful, symmetric erythema
and edema most pronounced over the distal pads of
the digits - Rxn may spread to dorsal hands and feet may be
accompanied by a morbilliform eruption - Erythema becomes dusky develops areas of pallor,
blisters, desquamates, then reepithelializes - Dequamation is often prominent
69Neutrophilic Eccrine Hidradenitis
- Clinical lesions are nonspecific
- Bx performed to exclude infection
- Histology-a neutrophilic infiltrate involving
glandular and ductal portions of the eccrine
gland - May be necrosis of eccrine unit, and in later
bxs syringometaplasia - Skin lesions resolve in 10 days, but in severe
cases may be tx with corticosteroids
- Most cases occur in neutropenic pts with
malignancies, usually AML - Occurs in children and adults-most commonly
associated with chemo, especially cytoarabine - Appears about after 7-10 days of tx
- Pts usually febrile
- Erythematous papules, plaques, or nodules
localized to trunk, extremities, axillae, or
pubic area, but may be generalized
70NEH
71Histology-NEH
- Infiltrate of inflammatory cells surrounding
eccrine coils
72Chemotherapy-Induced Hyperpigmentation
- Bleomycin and 5FU causes similar transverse bands
- Busulfan and 5FU in duiffuse hyperpigmentation
that may be photoaccentuated - Bleomycin induces characteristic flagellate
erythmatous urticarial wheals associated with
pruritis within hrs-days of infusion - Fluorouracil causes a serpentine
hyperpigmentation overlying veins of infusion
- Adriamycin causes marked hyperpigmentation of
nails, skin ,tongue - Most commonly seen in black pts
- Very similar to Zidovudine-associated
pigmentation seen in pigmented persons - Cyclophosphamide causes transverse banding of
nails or diffuse nail hyperpigmentation
73Acrodynia
- Caused by mercury poisoning, usually in infancy
- Skin changes are characteristic-almost
pathognomonic - Painful swelling of hands and feet
- Sometimes with pruritis
- Hands feet are dusky red, pink, cold clammy
- Erythema is usually blotchy but may be diffuse
74Acrodynia
- Erythema is blotchy but may be diffuse
- Hemorrrhagic puncta are sometimes evident
- Over trunk, a blotchy macular or papular erythema
is usually present - Stomatitis and loss of teeth may occur
- Constitutional symptoms consist of fever,
irritability, photophobia, increased perspiration - Always moderate upper respiratory inflammation
and sore throat
- May be hypertension, hypertonia, anorexia, and
insomnia - Albuminuria and hematuria are usually present
- Diagnosis is made by finding mercury in the urine
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78Etiology
- Broken thermometers
- Teething powders
- Poisoned fish
- Broken phosphorescent bulbs
- ?Gas heaters
79Treatment
- Chelating agents
- -dimercaprol
80Bromoderma
- A thick inflammatory plaque, with pustules in its
border, resembling blastomycosis, may also occur - There is rapid resolution of lesions when bromide
is stopped - It may occur after a small dose or after
protracted use of bromides - A small child suffered fatal bromoderma as a
result of one 50-mg dose of methacholine bromide
by injection
- Bromides commonly produce distinctive follicular
eruptions - Most common is acneform-with inflammatory
pustules in hairy parts of body and butterfly
area of face(must be differentiated from rosacea) - Vesicular lesions and bullae are common
- Nodular lesions with a violaceous color are
mistaken for malignant lymphoma of skin
81Bromoderma
- Bromides are excreted in breast milk
- No correlation seems to exist between plasma
levels and the severity of cutaneous lesions - Tx of bromoderma is simply cessation of bromide
ingestion
- In acute intoxication 2 to 4 g of sodium chloride
by mouth, taken daily, rapidly replaces the
bromide in body fluids - Ammonium chloride is also helpful
- In severe cases of intoxication in which the pt
is badly confused, ethacrynic acid rapidly
decreases the bromide level, with clearing of
lesions
82Bromoderma
83Bromoderma
- Bromide eruption on shin bullae and granulomas
84Iododerma
- Causes a wide variety of skin eruptions
- Most common-acneiform eruption with numerous
acutely inflammed follicular pustules, surrounded
by a ring of hyperemia - Bullous lesions are also common and may become
ulcerated and crusted - Pruitus and urticaria may be only manifestations
of mild iodism
- Purpura, furnuncles, erythema multiforme,
erythema nodosum, polyarteritis nodosa may also
occur - Swelling, redness, and scaling of eyelids occur
- Acne vulgaris and rosacea are worsened by iodine
- Treatment is same as bromoderma
85Iododerma
- Only brief duration distinguishes it clinically
from basal cell carcinoma
86Iododerma
87Topical Corticosteroids
- Prolonged exposure produces distinctive changes
- Appearance of these side effects depends on three
factors - 1.) strength of steroid
- 2.) area to which it is applied
- 3.) the individuals predisposition to certain
side effects
- Atrophy, striae, telangiectasia, skin fragility,
and purpura most frequent changes seen - Most striking telangiectasias in fair-skinned
individuals using fluorinated corticosteroids on
the face - Changes in skin are enhanced with occlusion
88- When these side effects occur, reduce strength of
steroid and add topicals like doxepin, pramoxine,
or menthol and camphor - Telangiectasiases usually disappear in a few
months after corticosteroid applications are
stopped
- When corticosteroid preparations are applied to
face over a period of weeks to months, persist
erythema with telangiectases may occur - Perioral dermatitis and rocacea may occur
- Steroid rosacea has been reported from long-term
use of 1 hydrocortisone cream
89- Repeated application of corticosteroids to the
face, scrotum or vulva may lead to marked atrophy
of these tissues - Tissue becomes addicted to the topical steroid,
so that withdrawing it results in severe itching
or burning - Difficult to manage
- Best to apply judicious use of topical steroid
preparations in these areas
- Topical applications can produce epidermal
atrophy with hypopigmentation - If used over a large area, sufficient topical
steroids may be absorbed to suppress the
hypothalamic pituitary axis - May affect growth of children with atopic
dermatitis and has led to Addisonian steroid
dependency and also Cushings syndrome
90- Paradoxically, topical corticosteroids may induce
allergic contact dermatitis - Consider this complication in any pt with an
eczematous dermatitis who becomes worse or is
refractory to topical steroid tx - Systemic corticosteroid administration may be
tolerated, but in some pts there is a cross
reaction manifested by whole-body allergic
dermatitis
- Atopic children with more than 50 body surface
area involvement have short stature - This may be related to their increased use of
potent topical steroids - Bone mineral density is reduced in adults with
chronic atopic dermatitis severs enough to
require steroids stronger than hydrocortisone
91Side effects
- Atrophy and purpura caused by prolonged
applications of corticosteroid preparations
92- Atrophy and fragility caused by chronic
corticosteroid applications
93Injected Corticosteroids
- Intralesional injection may produce subcutaneous
atrophy at site of injection - Injected steroid may migrate along lymphatics
causing not only local side effects but linear
atrophic hypopigmented hairless streaks - These may take years to resolve
- To avoid these complications-inject directly into
the lesion, not into the fat, and use only
minimal concentration and volume
- Intramuscular steroid injections should always be
given in the buttocks with a long needle (at
least 1.5 inches in adults) - Injection into deltoid muscle sometimes causes
subcutaneous atrophy - Pt becomes aware of rxn by noticing depression
and depigmentation at injection site - Pt can be assured that this will fill in but it
may take several yrs -
94Side effects corticosteriods
- Lipoatrophy of the buttock resulting from a
corticosteroid injection
95Systemic Corticosteroids
- Prolonged use may produce numerous changes of
skin - Have a profound effect on metabolism of many
tissues, leading to preditable, and preventable
complications - Intramuscular injections are not a safer delivery
method than oral administration
- Purpura or ecchymoses
- Cushingoid changes
- Steroid acne
- Striae
- Hair loss in 50 of pts
- Increased hair growth on bearded areas and arms,
back(vellus hairs) - HTN,aseptic necrosis of hip, osteoporosis
96How to combat side effects
- Bone loss can occur early in course of tx-so
manage preemptively-supplement with calcium
vitamin D(1.0-1.5 g calcium and 400-800 U of
cholecalciferol daily) - Stop smoking
- Decrease alcohol consumption
- Obtain bone mineral density at baseline (via DEXA
scan) throughout tx period (yrly?) - Hypogonadism which contributes to osteoporosis
can be treated in men and women with testosterone
and estrogen respectively - Calcitonin and bisphosphonates may be added to
mangement as needed
97THE END- Thank you