Background: The proportion of severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs) that could be avoided if medication use was consistent with good medical practice is unknown.
Objectives: To estimate the proportion of SCARs related to inappropriate medication use.
Methods: We carried out a retrospective study of all validated SCARs collected in a French registry between 2003 and 2016. For each case, all plausible drugs suspected of inducing SCARs (i.e. not just the drug regarded as 'the most probable') were considered with regard to (i) prescription for an inappropriate indication, (ii) unintentional rechallenge despite a previous allergy to the drug or (iii) self-medication with prescription medicines.
Results: In total, 602 cases were included in the analyses. Antibiotics, anticonvulsants and allopurinol were the drugs most frequently involved, accounting for more than 50% of all cases. All suspected medications were considered to have been appropriately used for 417 of the 602 individuals included in the study population [69·3%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 65·6-73·0] and inappropriately used for 144 individuals (23·9%, 95% CI 20·5-27·3). These inappropriate uses were due mainly to prescriptions for an inappropriate indication (65·8%, 95% CI 58·4-73·2) or unintentional rechallenge (20·9%, 95% CI 14·6-27·2). Allopurinol and co-trimoxazole were the drugs most frequently involved in inappropriate indications. Antibiotics were the largest group involved in unintentional rechallenge. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, available on prescription, were most frequently involved in inappropriate self-medication.
Conclusions: Our results underline the need for respecting the appropriate indication for drugs in order to reduce the incidence of SCARs. Reducing unintentional rechallenge also seems to be a necessary preventive measure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjd.16365 | DOI Listing |
Pharmacol Res
May 2024
Service of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University Hospital Virgen de la Victoria, Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Málaga y Plataforma en Nanomedicina-IBIMA Plataforma Bionand, Universidad de Málaga, Málaga, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédico en Red Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Madrid, Spain.
Introduction: Data on positive rechallenge in idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) are scarce. We aim to analyse the clinical presentation, outcome and drugs associated with positive rechallenge in two DILI registries.
Methods: Cases from the Spanish and Latin American DILI registries were included.
Hosp Pharm
December 2021
Roper Hospital, Charleston, SC, USA.
The authors describe a case of clinically apparent idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity in association with unfractionated heparin (UFH). A 52-year-old woman with increasingly symptomatic rheumatic mitral valvular disease and severe pulmonary hypertension underwent elective minimally-invasive bioprosthetic mitral valve replacement. The patient received 42 000 units of UFH intraoperatively 10 days after receiving 3100 units during a left heart catheterization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranspl Infect Dis
August 2021
Division of Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine, Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.
Tigecycline has been approved by the US (United States) Food and Drug Administration in a variety of complicated infections due to its broad-spectrum antibiotic activity. Following phase III trials, the product label was revised and acute pancreatitis was listed as an adverse effect. Its safety profile in special groups such as renal transplant patients is not exactly known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gastrointestin Liver Dis
June 2018
Institute for Translational Medicine, University of Pécs, Medical School, Pécs, Hungary.
5-aminosalicylic acid has been reported to be able of inducing acute pancreatitis as an adverse reaction. However, in most case reports, rechallenge of the drug is missing; therefore, evidence is still needed to confirm its role in the clinical course of acute pancreatitis and its influence on the outcome. Here, we report a case of recurrent acute pancreatitis secondary to 5-aminosalicylic acid, with positive unintentional rechallenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Transl Hepatol
March 2018
Department of Internal Medicine II, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Klinikum Hanau, Teaching Hospital of the Medical Faculty of the Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
Cases of suspected herb-induced liver injury (HILI) caused by herbal Traditional Chinese Medicines (TCMs) and of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) are commonly published in the scientific literature worldwide. As opposed to the multiplicity of botanical chemicals in herbal TCM products, which are often mixtures of several herbs, conventional Western drugs contain only a single synthetic chemical. It is therefore of interest to study how HILI by TCM and DILI compare with each other, and to what extent results from each liver injury type can be transferred to the other.
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