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Clinical features, diagnosis and management of cephalosporin-induced acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis

Authors :
Haibo Lei
Hongyi Deng
Xiang Liu
Zuojun Li
Chunjiang Wang
Source :
Journal of clinical pharmacy and therapeuticsREFERENCES.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) is a serious and rare adverse reaction of cephalosporins. We aimed to describe the clinical features of cephalosporin-induced AGEP and provide a reference for rational clinical use of cephalosporins.We systematically searched Chinese and English databases for cephalosporin-induced TGEP-related case reports, retrospective studies, clinical studies, and review articles published before May 2022.A total of 43 patients from 35 articles were eligible, of which 28 (65.1%) were female, with a median age of 69 years. A total of 11 cephalosporins were suspected, the most commonly involved were ceftriaxone (41.9%), cephalexin (16.3%), and cefepime (9.3%). AEGP erupted primarily within 14 days after administration, manifested as nonfollicular pustules on an erythematous base, distributed favourably to the extremities (44.2%), trunk (23.3%), face (23.3%), and could involve the oral mucosa (11.6%). During AGEP resolution, the affected area had desquamation (39.5%). The acute phase of the disease may be accompanied by fever (38.0°C) and elevated neutrophil count (7500/mmCephalosporin-induced AGEP is rare and should be properly diagnosed. This serious cutaneous adverse reaction is self-limiting and has a favourable prognosis, usually resolves with drug interruption, and may require additional interventions, such as topical steroids.

Details

ISSN :
13652710
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical pharmacy and therapeuticsREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ecaf34d45958f6497899e7e9c4013d61