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Severe drug eruption after antibiotic administration in patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors: A monocentric case series

Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is often associated with cutaneous immune‐related adverse events (irAEs). Drug eruptions stemming from concomitantly or consecutively administered medications are also frequent and tend to be severe. We herein present three cases of severe drug eruption in p...

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Published in:JEADV clinical practice 2023-06, Vol.2 (2), p.330-337
Main Authors: Nishizawa, Aya, Takeda, Koichi, Urasaki, Tetsuya, Ono, Makiko, Mochizuki, Toshiaki, Shiga, Taro, Fujiwara, Motohiro, Yuasa, Takeshi, Murakami, Atsushi, Koike, Ryo, Yunokawa, Mayu, Kanao, Hiroyuki, Shimozaki, Keitaro, Takahari, Daisuke, Kogawa, Takahiro, Takahashi, Shunji, Kitano, Shigehisa
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creator Nishizawa, Aya
Takeda, Koichi
Urasaki, Tetsuya
Ono, Makiko
Mochizuki, Toshiaki
Shiga, Taro
Fujiwara, Motohiro
Yuasa, Takeshi
Murakami, Atsushi
Koike, Ryo
Yunokawa, Mayu
Kanao, Hiroyuki
Shimozaki, Keitaro
Takahari, Daisuke
Kogawa, Takahiro
Takahashi, Shunji
Kitano, Shigehisa
description Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is often associated with cutaneous immune‐related adverse events (irAEs). Drug eruptions stemming from concomitantly or consecutively administered medications are also frequent and tend to be severe. We herein present three cases of severe drug eruption in patients receiving antibiotics during ICI therapy in which hypotensive shock occurring during antibiotic administration was followed by generalized erythema and prolonged organ damage. Three patients received tazobactam/piperacillin (TAZ/PIPC) for an infection during ICI treatment. A high fever developed in all the patients after a switch was made to other antibiotics (Figures 2–4). Since no skin rash was observed at fever onset, a flare‐up of the infection was suspected, and TAZ/PIPC administration was resumed. Thereafter, the patients suddenly experienced hypotensive shock and respiratory failure requiring ICU management for generalized erythema and organ damage. Since anaphylaxis caused by TAZ/PIPC is rare, the patients’ clinical findings might be a manifestation of synergistic, complementary, immunomodulatory effects of ICI. In patients receiving ICI therapy, a fever occurring during antibiotic administration may indicate the onset of an immune hypersensitivity reaction to the drug. Resumption of antibiotic administration, especially TAZ/PIPC, during such a period may trigger an excessive inflammatory response, leading to an anaphylaxis‐like reaction and organ damage.
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Drug eruptions stemming from concomitantly or consecutively administered medications are also frequent and tend to be severe. We herein present three cases of severe drug eruption in patients receiving antibiotics during ICI therapy in which hypotensive shock occurring during antibiotic administration was followed by generalized erythema and prolonged organ damage. Three patients received tazobactam/piperacillin (TAZ/PIPC) for an infection during ICI treatment. A high fever developed in all the patients after a switch was made to other antibiotics (Figures 2–4). Since no skin rash was observed at fever onset, a flare‐up of the infection was suspected, and TAZ/PIPC administration was resumed. Thereafter, the patients suddenly experienced hypotensive shock and respiratory failure requiring ICU management for generalized erythema and organ damage. 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subjects Anaphylaxis
Antibiotics
Apheresis
Bacterial infections
Blood pressure
Conflicts of interest
Dyspnea
Edema
Enzymes
Erythema
facial oedema
Females
Fever
Hematology
Hypotension
immune checkpoint inhibitor
immune‐related cutaneous adverse event
Kidney cancer
Liver
Melanoma
Patients
Pneumonia
respiratory failure
Skin cancer
tazobactam/piperacillin
Thrombocytopenia
Urinary tract diseases
Urinary tract infections
Urogenital system
title Severe drug eruption after antibiotic administration in patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors: A monocentric case series
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