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Contents. Clinical manifestationsMechanisms of allergic drug reactionsClassification of immunopathologic drug reactionsFactors related to allergic drug reactionsDrugs commonly causing drug reactionsDetection and management of drug reactions. Allergic and Pseudoallergic Drug reactions. 5-10% of all adverse drug reactionsAllergic drug reaction : an adverse effect involving immunologic mechanismsAllergic-like or Pseudoallergic reactions : Adverse effects not proven to be immune mediated, but1143
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1. Allergic and Pseudoallergic Drug Reactions Pharmacotherapy II and
Treatment in common diseases
Usasiri Srisakul 7 Nov 2003
3. Allergic and PseudoallergicDrug reactions 5-10% of all adverse drug reactions
Allergic drug reaction : an adverse effect involving immunologic mechanisms
Allergic-like or Pseudoallergic reactions : Adverse effects not proven to be immune mediated, but resembling allergic reaction in their clinical presentation
4. Clinical manifestations Anaphylaxis : acute, life-threatening, multiple organ systems
Skin: pruritus, urticaria, erythema and angioedema
GI: nausea, abd. Pain, vomiting and diarrhea
Respi: SOB, bronchospasm
CVS: hypotension, tachycardia and dysrhythmias
5. Begin within 30 mins – 2 hrs after exposure
Fatal anaphylaxis risk in first few hours : asphyxia due to laryngeal edema or CVS collapse
After recovery: May recurrent 6-8 hours (late phase reactions) after antigen exposure
6. Clinical manifestation 2. Serum Sickness
Condition of Ag excess ? circulating immune complex from heterologous antiserum ex. equine serum antitoxins
Occurs in 7-14 days : fever, malaise and lymphadenopathy most common, may skin eryption
Drugs: sulfonamides, penicillins and cecholosporins(cefaclor)
SLE reactions from drugs ex. Hydralazine, isoniazid and phenytoin
7. 3. Drug Fever
Inflammatory process of drug reaction : methyldopa, procainamide, phenytoin, barniturates quinidine and antibiotics
Drugs may affect the CNS to alter temp. regulation or release pyrogens (IL-1, TNF) from WBC
Fever resulting from massive tumor destruction due to chemotherapy
Temporal relationship between fever and drugs
8. 4. Drug-induced Autoimmunity
SLE induced by procainamide, hydralazine or isoniazid : arthralgias, myalgias and polyarthritis…may multiple organs occur
Reactions develop several months
Resolve after discontinued
Others belived to involve autoimmune mechanisms
9. Hemolytic anemia: methyldopa
Interstitial nephritis: methicillin: fever, rash, eosinophillia, proteinuria, hematuria
Hepatitis: phenytoin,sulfonamides, isoniazid: hepatocellular necrosis or cholestatic hepatitis
10. Clinical manifestation 5. Vasculitis : inflammation and necrosis of blood vessels
Skin and multiple organ involve : liver, kidney, joints, CNS
Cutaneous vasculitis in lower extremities: purpuric lesion, papules, nodules, ulceration, vesiculobullous lesion
Allopurinol, beta-lactam antibiotics, sulfonamides, thaizide diuretics and phenytoin
11. 6. Dermatologic reactions
Cutaneous lesions are the most common
Mild and resolve
but some progress to serious or life threatening reactions: toxic epidermal necrosis (TEN) and Stevens-Johnson syndrome
Antibiotics are the most frequency Clinical manifestation
12. Toxic Epidermal Necrosis (TEN)
13. Steven-Johnson Syndrome
14. Angioedema
15. 7. Respiratory reactions
Upper and lower tract reactions: rhinitis, asthma
Direct injury from systemic reaction ex.anaphylaxis
Asthma: aspirin, other NSAIDs, sulfites as preservative in food and medications
Chronic fibrotic pulmonary reactions
Anti-neoplastics: bleomycin Clinical manifestation
16. 8. Hematologic reactions
Eosinophillia is a common in drug hypersensitivity
Hemolytic anemia
Thrombocxytopenia, granulocytopenia and agranulocytosis Clinical manifestation
17. Mechanism of Allergic Drug Reactions Immunologic review
Humeral Immunity: B-cell
Cell-mediated Immunity: T cell
Inflammation Mediators
Allergic reaction mediators
Hypersensitivity types
18. ?????????????? (Hypersensitivity)
19. ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ???????????????????????????????????????????????? lymphocytes
20. Type I Hypersensitivity
21. B cell ? IgE ? cover mast cell ???? Fc ??? IgE ???????????????? Fab ?????????????????????????? mast cell degranulation? proinflammatory mediators
22. H1 receptors ? vascular permeability, vasodilatation, urticaria, brochospasm, coughing ??? increase gut permeability
23. ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????? (urticaria) ???????????????????????????? ?????????? ???????? (shortness of breath) ????????????? (Tachycardia) ?????????? (hypotension)
24. ??????????????????????? ?????? 1. antihistamines 2. bronchodilators ? theophyllines , ?-adrenergics 3. cromolyn sodium ?stabilized ????????? mast cell 4. anticholinergics
25. Type II Hypersensitivitycytotoxic ???? cytolytic hypersensitivity
26. IgG ??? IgM ->Fab ?????????????????????????? antigen-antibody complex? Fc ????????? complement ???? ????????????????????? ?classic pathway, cell injury
27. Type III Hypersensitivity
28. ?????? serum sickness, glomerulonephritis, SLE, arthritis (?????????) ??? vasculitis (???????????????)
29. Type IV Hypersensitivity delayed hypersensitivity
30. ?????? cutaneous basophil hypersensitivity (Jones-Mote), contact hypersensitivity, tuberculin-type hypersensitivity, granulomatous hypersensitivity ??? transplant rejection
31. Anaphylactoid reaction Number of substances can produce and anaphylactoid reaction(anaphylaxis-like)
Release inflammatory mediators by pharmacologic effect but not through IgE call “pseudoallergic reaction”
Drugs: opiates, iodinated radiocontrast agents, vancomycin, amphotericin
32. Factors related to the occurrence or severity of allergic drug reaction Dose of allergen
Duration of exposure
Route of exposure: more sensitize in topical route, safe in oral route, parenteral route is most hazardous
Sensitivity of the individual: genetics, metabolism
Pt. Who has history of allergic rhinitis, asthma, and/or atopic dermatitis, esp. drug allergy
Age: less in children
Diseases predispose to drug reaction ex. Rash after penicillin administration in infectious pt. Reaction after bactrim in AIDS pt.
33. Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction Beta-lactam antibiotics
Penicillin: 0.7-8% : urticaria, pruritus, angioedema. 10% fetal. All four types hypersensitivites
Wide variety of idiopathic reactions: maculopapular eruption, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, exfoliative dermatitis
Rash increase 69-100% in Epstein-Barr virus infection, cytomegalovirus, lymphocytic leukemia
34. Mechanism: penicilloyl-protein conjugate ? “antigenic determinant”
Cross-reactivity to other beta-lactam antibiotics: cephalosporins
Weakly cross-reactivity to monobactam and aztreonam
Cross-reactivity to carbapenems, imipenem? should not be administered to pt with positive penicillin skin test Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
35. 2. Radiocontrast media
Frequency case allergic-like reactions
Commonly 5-10%: urticaria, dyspnea,angioedema, bronchospasm, fetal (0.01%)
May cause dose-dependent toxic reactions to CVS and renal function
Mechanism unclear: not IgE mediated
Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
36. Direct activation of complement system, relase inflammatory mediators
Low-osmolar agents and nonionic less frequency of reactions than high-osmolar or conventional agents
Risk in pt with history
Skin test and oral testing is not useful Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
37. Pretreatment:
Prednisolone 5o mg orally 13, 7, 1 hrs before
Diphenhydramine 50 mg orally and 25 mg IM 1 hr before
Ephedrine 25 mg orally 1 hr before (omitted angina, dysrhythymia or hypertension) Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
38. 3. Insulin
A protein : a complete antigen from beef, pork or human(recombinant) origin
Variety reactions: insulin, other substances ex.protamine
Pts have anti-insulin antibodies after 2-3 months of therapy Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
39. Local reactions: most common: wheal, flare at he injection site after 8-12 hrs. ? mild do not require treatment and resolve with continued therapy ? if not tolerate: give different insulin source(higher purity)
Rare systemic reactions: urticaria, anaphylaxis. IgE mediated
Skin test for least systemic reactions
Insulin desensitization in some pts Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
40. 4. Aspirin and NSAIDs
2 types: 1% urticaria/angioedema or 0.5% rhinosinusitis/asthma
Rhinosinusitis/asthma
Middle-age pts
Ketorolac cause severe, life-threatening bronchospasm
Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
41. Suspected mechanism:
COX blockade, facilitate others metabolites ex.leukotrienes or direct stimulate mast cells
Asthma pts: should be challenged with great caution (resuscitation equipment in hand)
Pt known aspirin sensitive ? Major prevention
NSAIDs associated with pulmonary infiltrates and eosinophilia (PIE) syndrome: fever, cough, dyspnea and eosinophilia in 2-6 weeks after treatment
Report more frequency for Naproxen
Resolve rapidly after discontinuation Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
42. 5. Sulfonamides
Common cause of allergic reactions
Number of drug classes: antimicrobials, diuretics, oral hypoglycemics and carbonic anhydrase inhibitors
Typically case delayed cutaneous reactions beginning with fever and followed by rash
Other systemic reactions are rare but fatal: GI, hepatic, renal, hematologic complication
Mechanism: immune mediated and reactive metabolites(hydroxylamines) Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
43. TMX/sulfa for treatment of PCP in AIDS
Much more frequently in pts without AIDS
Cutaneous eruptions 69%
Less than 14 days of treatment Drugs commonly causing allergic or allergic-like reaction
44. Detection and Management of Allergic and Pseudoallergic Drug Reactions Detection
Pts at high risk: history, specific tests
Skin tests
drug-specific IgE
Predict high risk of immediate hypersensitivity
Not predict the risk of delayed or dermatologic reactions
Pts with history of penicillin allergy are recognized 4-6 fold greater risk of subsequent reactions
Pts with negative history of penicillin NOT eliminate risk: may cause serious and even fetal reactions
45. Treatment of Anaphylaxis Minimize the risk of death and serious morbidity
Restore respiratory and CVS (Protocol Table82.4)
Epinephrine, IV fluids, ET tubation
Hypotension: vasopressor, NE, dopoamine
46. Other agents may be required
Corticosteroids(hydrocortisone sodium succinate) ? prevent late-phase reaction
Aminophylline for treat bronchospasm
H1 blocker: diphenhydramine ? reduce symptoms associated with anaphylaxis
H2 blocker: cimetidine ? treatment of refractory hypotension Treatment of Anaphylaxis
47. Desensitization: no alternative drugs or necessary to treat with penicillin
Reduce risk of anaphylaxis but NOT others types ex. Exfoliative dermatitis or Steven-Johnson syndrome
Performed with resuscitation setting available
Premedication is controversial because mask sign of reactions
Protocol for oral and IV penicillin desensitization (Table 82.5 and 82.6)
Treatment of Anaphylaxis