Suspected cutaneous drug toxicity in rheumatoid arthritis--an evaluation.
Wilkinson SM, Smith AG, Davis MJ, Mattey DL, Dawes PT.
Dermatology Department, North Staffordshire Hospital Centre, Stoke-on-Trent.
Cutaneous toxicity from drugs used to treat RA is a major perceived problem. Over a 2-yr period we have prospectively reviewed 114 patients with a suspected adverse cutaneous reaction to anti-rheumatic drugs. In 71 (62%), the rash was thought to be unrelated to drug therapy. This group included 10 in whom the rash had resolved before review (usually < 1 week), 38 with a rash related to their rheumatoid disease and 23 with eruptions unrelated to either drugs or arthritis. Forty-three (38%) patients had rashes thought to be related to their drug therapy. Gold therapy (both oral and intramuscular) was implicated most frequently (31 patients). However, the majority of these (23) had a pityriasiform/discoid eczematous eruption that responded to potent topical steroids occasionally with a reduction in gold dosage. In this sample it was possible to continue drug therapy in 82% of patients with what were initially thought to be cutaneous adverse drug reactions. Careful evaluation should allow a majority of patients to continue drug therapy from which they are often gaining benefit.
PMID: 8103699 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]