DERMATOLOGY,  Drug Reactions

Morbilliform Drug Eruption (Maculopapular/Exanthematous Drug Eruption)

Definition

  • Most common form of drug-induced rash (~95% of drug eruptions).
  • Resembles viral exanthems; symmetric, widespread red maculopapular rash.
  • Delayed Type IV hypersensitivity (T-cell-mediated).

TypeMechanismTimeImmune MediatorsExample Conditions
IIgE-mediated degranulation of mast cells & basophilsImmediate (minutes)IgE, histamine, leukotrienesAnaphylaxis, allergic rhinitis, urticaria, asthma
IIAntibody (IgG/IgM)-mediated cell destruction via complement or ADCCMinutes to hoursIgG/IgM, complement, NK cellsAutoimmune haemolytic anaemia, Goodpasture’s syndrome, Graves’ disease
IIIImmune complex deposition → complement activation & inflammationHours to daysIgG, complement, neutrophilsSLE, post-streptococcal GN, serum sickness, Arthus reaction
IVT-cell mediated cytotoxicity or cytokine-mediated inflammationDelayed (48–72 hrs)T cells (CD4+ or CD8+), macrophagesContact dermatitis, tuberculin reaction, Type 1 diabetes, MS

Who Gets It

  • Occurs in ~2% of people started on a new medication.
  • Common offending drugs:
    • Antibiotics (penicillins, cephalosporins, sulfonamides)
    • Allopurinol
    • Antiepileptics (phenytoin, carbamazepine, lamotrigine)
    • NSAIDs
    • Herbal/natural therapies

Risk Factors

  • Previous drug reaction or FHx of drug eruptions
  • Viral infections (EBV, HHV-6/7)
  • Immunodeficiency (HIV, autoimmune disease, CF)
  • Polypharmacy

Pathophysiology

  • Type IV hypersensitivity → cytotoxic T-cell activation
  • Inflammatory cytokine release directed at drug/metabolite or haptenated self-proteins

Clinical Features

  • Latency:
    • 1–2 weeks after first drug exposure
    • 1–3 days if previously sensitised
  • Distribution:
    • Starts on trunk → spreads to limbs/neck
    • Bilateral, symmetrical
  • Morphology:
    • Pink/red macules or papules → coalesce into patches/plaques
    • +/- blanching (purpura may appear on legs)
    • May mimic urticaria, target lesions, annular or polymorphous rashes
    • Sparing of axillae/groin typical, unless SDRIFE pattern
  • Systemic:
    • ± Low-grade fever, pruritus
    • Peeling (desquamation) as rash resolves

Complications (Red Flags for SCAR)

Consider SCAR if any of the following:

  • Mucosal involvement
  • Blisters or skin sloughing
  • Painful rash
  • Systemic symptoms (fever >38.5°C, malaise)
  • Facial oedema
  • Pustules → consider AGEP
  • Eosinophilia, organ dysfunction → consider DRESS
  • Generalised purpura/palpable purpura
  • Erythroderma

Diagnosis

  • Clinical: Temporal association with new medication
  • Drug Calendar: Start date vs. rash onset
  • Tests (if needed):
    • CBC, LFTs, UECs, CRP
    • Serology for viral mimics
    • Skin biopsy (if uncertain): Interface dermatitis ± eosinophils
  • No confirmatory test available for causative drug

Differential Diagnosis

  • Viral exanthems (measles, rubella, roseola)
  • Scarlet fever
  • Kawasaki disease
  • Toxic erythema of infection
  • GvHD
  • Autoimmune/connective tissue disease

Treatment

  • Withdraw culprit drug (if safe to do so)
  • Symptomatic:
    • Topical corticosteroids
    • Emollients
    • Wet wraps (for extensive inflammation)
    • Oral antihistamines (limited efficacy)
  • Specialist input if:
    • Drug is essential or high suspicion for SCAR

Prognosis

  • If drug ceased → rash improves in 48h, resolves in 1–2 weeks
  • If drug continued:
    • May resolve, persist, or progress to SCAR/erythroderma

Prevention

  • Document allergy in medical record
  • Educate patient re: re-exposure risk
  • Avoid unnecessary antibiotic or high-risk drug use

References

  • DermNet NZ (Dr Delwyn Dyall-Smith, A/Prof Amanda Oakley)
  • Adapted for Australian clinical practice

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