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Stevens-Johnson Syndrome and Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis Grant J. Anhalt, MD Professor, Dermatology & Pathology Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine Disclosures Consulting for GlaxoSmithKline No conflict of interest No commercial sponsorship Definition Rare, acute syndrome characterized by systemic symptoms, mucosal ulcerations and blistering skin lesions. Spectrum of disease that includes: Erythema multiforme Stevens Johnson Syndrome Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis 1 Definition Differentiated by degree of body surface area blistering observed : 10% BSA – SJS 10-30% - Overlap >30% BSA – TEN Clinical features Blisters and erosions of skin and mucous membranes, directly affects only “stratified squamous epithelium” Histology shows lymphocytes (T cells) in the epidermis, and epidermal cell death that can be limited (EM) or confluent (TEN) Blood work – unremarkable Skin biopsy is required Clinical features Internal organs can be damaged by secondary events: Infection / sepsis Respiratory complications Multi-organ failure due to massive cell death that overwhelms salvage mechanisms 2 Epidemiology Roughly 2-3 cases / million population / year in Europe and USA More frequent in adults than children M : F ratio – equal (more to come on that….) More frequent in HIV disease HLA association only in select populations (e.g. carbamazepine in Han Chinese). Etiology In adults, almost always drugs (in some, no identifiable cause) Risk for highly associated drugs – 1/10,000 to 1/100,000 patients In children, some are due to Mycoplasma pneumonia infection (perhaps 20%), Herpes simplex virus (less severe cases), and other infections Drugs in SJS / TEN Three major culprits: 1) Anti-infective sulfonamides (Bactrim) 2) Anti-epileptic drugs (Phenobarbital, dilantin, carbamazepine, lamictal) 3) Allopurinol Recent increasing interest in NSAIDs & acetaminophen as potential causes 3 Clinical Manifestations First exposure to drug – lag time to onset of prodromal symptoms usually 4+ to 28 days. Prodromal symptoms (~1-3 days) mimic a viral infection - low grade fever, nausea, conjunctival and oral suffusion and tenderness. Then a morbilliform rash of the upper trunk, head and neck area appears. Clinical Manifestations Redness rapidly becomes confluent, turns dusky and then the epidermis sloughs off in sheets. Extensive, extraordinarily painful ulcerations of oropharynx, conjunctiva and genital mucosa. Patients should receive supportive care in a burn facility and any suspect drugs should be stopped. There is no drug or treatment that has proven to halt the disease progression. Pediatric SJS 4 Adult TEN Adult TEN Outcome From blistering to healing – about 3-5 weeks. Immediate complications include infection, pulmonary complications and multi-organ failure. Mortality – overall ~ 20%, <10% in SJS and >40% in TEN. Mortality can be predicted by the SCORTEN scoring system. Poor outcomes predicted by greater BSA involved, increasing age and metabolic derangements. 5 Late Complications Skin can heal without scarring but secondary infection may cause areas of scar and loss of nails. Ocular scarring can be severe and lead to blindness. Strictures may form in the esophagus, bronchi, genital mucosa and urethra. Pathophysiology SJS / TEN results from activation of the immune system. The immune system has the capacity to ruthlessly kill cells, as an important tool in viral infections and suppressing cancer. Viral infections are defeated by producing antibodies that neutralize free virus, but also by killing viral-infected cells, which are factories for new virus. T Cell Mediated Killing T cells kill other targeted cells by production of many different cytokines and enzymes: Granzyme / perforin / granulysin punch holes in the cell membrane and induce apoptotic cell death Tumor Necrosis Factor – α and Fas / Fas ligand interactions also trigger apoptosis Nitrous Oxide induces cell necrosis 6 The “Prodrome” in SJS/TEN Mimics a viral illness, because T cells also secrete cytokines such as gamma-interferon, which helps inhibit viral replication. But gamma-interferon is the cause of the symptoms (fever, nausea, myalgias, etc.) that make one feel sick in viral illnesses. Gamma interferon is used to treat HepC, but is hard to tolerate because it makes patients feel like the have “the flu” 24/7… 7 Time to Onset It is biologically impossible to generate all of the activated T cells required to kill off the whole body’s epidermis in less than 4+ days. The exception – if a patient has had previous exposure to a drug, with a “generic” drug rash, there will be a population of already sensitized T cells waiting to be activated again, and this can occur in just 2-3 days. Time to Onset “More precise evaluation of time relationship strongly suggests that SJS and TEN most often begin more than 4 and up to 28 days after the initiation of the responsible medication. We advise to integrate these figures in the algorithms used for assessing the causality of medications in individual cases.” Mockenhaupt et al, Euroscar study, 2008 8 SJS/TEN Literature High quality studies are few, and due to rarity, prospective studies or drug trials can’t happen. Good data is found in the “EuroSCAR” studies Case control series from several European countries and Israel, encompassing 1800 hospitals and 100 million people over 4 years. 379 confirmed cases and 1,505 controls Mockenhaupt M. J Invest Derm 2008:128, p35 SJS/TEN Literature However, the general medical literature is polluted with many anecdotal case reports, small case series, and even studies that confuse true SJS/TEN with other drug reactions, like DRESS syndrome (Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms), and other far less severe drug reactions. It’s easy to find some reference to support any claim. Determining Causality “It is a problem in determining the etiology of SJS-TEN that drugs taken during the prodromal phase to alleviate symptoms cannot be distinguished from those that actually caused the disease.” (Fitzpatrick’s DIGM, 6th Ed, p.549) Physicians are generally trained to expect that the most recently introduced drug is the cause of the drug reaction 9 Acetaminophen (Tylenol) Recently – FDA required a Black Box warning to be added re: the risk of SJS / TEN EuroScar showed a weak association. But, they felt that “antipyretic agents are used to treat unspecific symptoms such as fever or pain” To control for “confounding by indication” they restricted the analysis to patients who took the drug at least 4 days before the onset of the AE, and the observed association “disappeared…” Alden Algorithm Algorithm of Drug Causality in Epidermal Necrolysis - 6 criteria to help identify or exclude causative drugs (Sassolas B, Clin Pharm Ther 2010, 88:1, p 60). 2 major criteria - Drug intake to first symptoms 5-28 days is the most likely time frame Notariety of drug – Drugs known to be strongly associated get the highest score Incorrect Diagnosis Many physicians have only a vague idea of the precise definition of SJS/TEN They know that it’s caused by drugs and patients get really sick Any “drug rash serious enough to require hospitalization” can be misdiagnosed, and this happens frequently. Once labeled as SJS/TEN, the diagnosis carries through the medical record 10 Incorrect Diagnoses DRESS – Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms. Allergist Charlesworth published on the beneficial effects of steroids in SJS/TEN, but many of his cases were DRESS AGEP – Acute generalized erythematous pustulosis – also caused by drugs, dramatic in appearance but no long term complications Exfoliative Erythroderma – can also be caused by drugs, but lacks mucosal involvement Claims – Treatment Below Standard of Care Small case series have shown benefit from many treatments, including IVIg, systemic steroids, cyclosporine, and others For each publication promoting an effective treatment, there is usually a similar number showing no beneficial effect Most agree that supportive care in a facility experienced in burn treatment is the only helpful treatment IVIg High dose normal human immunoglobulins 1998 article showed up-regulation of Fas/Fas ligand in TEN. IvIg can inhibit this interaction. Viard I, Science 1998, 282:490 However, there are multiple mechanisms through which T cells kill their targets It’s not reasonable to expect that inhibition of just one pathway would have a net effect 11 Example of claims Elderly patient, hospitalized for infected knee prosthesis. On multiple antibiotics plus 2 associated drugs, allopurinol (months) and vancomycin (7 days). New fever - abx changed to ceftazidime – 24 hours later, first blisters appeared. Eventually she died in the Burn Unit. Claim – TEN caused by ceftazidime, due to known h/o allergy to penicillin and crossreactivity. Response At trial we were successfully able to explain that 24 hours is not enough time to develop the disease after exposure to a new drug. She was on more highly implicated drugs, within the appropriate time frame There is no cross-reactivity between penicillin and 3rd generation cephalosporins. Penicillin allergies are Type I reactions, not Type IV Example of Claims Teenager develops cough, fever of 4 days duration. CXR shows infiltrate, started on azithromicin for presumed Mycoplasma pneumonia. 2 days later, conjunctivitis, mucositis and recurrent fever. 24 hours later first oral ulcers and skin rash appears. Eventually develops SJS. Claim – azithromicin caused her SJS. 12 Response Although Mockenhaupt has written that essentially all cases of SJS/TEN are due to drugs, there are numerous decent case series that show a convincing relationship with Mycoplasma pneumonia. The time line from drug exposure to prodromal symptoms was too short to implicate azithromycin. Summary SJS/TEN is an unpredictable and rare event It has a clearly defined set of signs and symptoms, and clinical evolution Causality can be determined by establishing appropriate timing of drug administration and drug notariety Supportive care is the only recognized beneficial treatment 13