An 81-year-old male and a 47-year-old female experienced recurrent severe bullous dermatosis secondary to an intake of drugs and alternative medicines indicated for arthralgias. The first patient had previously presented with Stevens–Johnson/toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) overlap syndrome in 2007 secondary to ingestion of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole indicated for a urinary tract infection; 6 years later, he presented with the same syndrome 2 days after ingestion of oral naproxen tablets 250 mg twice daily. The second patient had presented 5 years previously with TEN after receiving trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole. In 2014, she presented with arthralgias and received a xenobiotic oral called ‘miracle pills’ (dosage is unknown); 3 weeks later, she again experienced TEN. Both patients were treated with intravenous immunoglobulin 400 mg/kg/day; duration of treatment was 5 days for the first patient and 3 days for the second. However, the male patient died from severe sepsis; the female patient experienced a favorable outcome. There are many risk factors for the development of cutaneous adverse drug reactions; a history of allergic reactions is one important risk factor, and both patients had it. This article reviews the scientific literature on this topic and analyzes the possible causes, including infectious processes, immunological defects, and immunogenetic factors.
Los betalactámicos son los antimicrobianos más utilizados por su seguridad y eficacia. En este grupo se incluyen las penicilinas, las cefalosporinas, los carbapenémicos y los monobactámicos. La penicilina constituye la primera causa de alergia a medicamentos: 10 a 20 % de la población se etiqueta como alérgica a la misma, en muchas ocasiones erróneamente. Se ha reportado reacción cruzada entre penicilinas y cefalosporina en 2 a 5 %. No hay reacción cruzada entre penicilinas y aztreonam, pero sí con ceftazidima. En la fisiopatología de las reacciones de hipersensibilidad a penicilina se incluyen todos los mecanismos de la clasificación de Gell y Coombs. La estratificación de acuerdo con el riesgo permite tomar la decisión más objetiva para etiquetar al paciente como alérgico. En la evolución natural de la alergia a la penicilina, 80 a 90 % de los pacientes pierde dicha sensibilidad a los 10 años. De ser indispensable, el paciente puede ser sometido a un protocolo de desensibilización. El médico inmunoalergologo es una pieza clave en la selección del paciente, la elaboración de los protocolos de reto y la desensibilización en un ambiente controlado.
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