Department of Dermatology, Rasoul Akram Hospital, Iran University of Medical Sciences (IUMS), Tehran, Iran.
Student Research committee, School of medicine, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Dermatol Ther. 2021 Jan;34(1):e14662. doi: 10.1111/dth.14662. Epub 2020 Dec 26.
Most of drugs could have certain mucocutaneous reactions and COVID-19 drugs are not an exception that we focused. We systematically reviewed databases until August 15, 2020 and among initial 851 articles, 30 articles entered this study (20 case reports, 4 cohorts, and 6 controlled clinical trials). The types of reactions included AGEP, morbiliform drug eruptions, vasculitis, DRESS syndrome, urticarial vasculitis, and so on. The treatments have been used before side effects occur, included: antimalarial, anti-viral, antibiotics, tocilizumab, enoxaparin and and so on. In pandemic, we found 0.004% to 4.15% of definite drug-induced mucocutaneous reactions. The interval between drug usage and the eruption varied about few hours to 1 month; tightly dependent to the type of drug and hydroxychloroqine seems to be the drug with highest mean interval. Antivirals, antimalarials, azithromycin, and tocilizumab are most responsive drugs for adverse drug reactions, but antivirals especially in combination with antimalarial drugs are in the first step. Types of skin reactions are usually morbilliform/exanthematous maculopapular rashes or urticarial eruptions, which mostly may manage by steroids during few days. In the setting of HCQ, specific reactions like AGEP should be considered. Lopinavir/ritonavir is the most prevalent used drug among antivirals with the highest skin adverse reaction; ribarivin and remdisivir also could induce cutaneous drug reactions but favipiravir has no or less adverse effects. Logically the rate of dermatologic adverse effects among anivirals may relate to their frequency of usage. Rarely, potentially life-threatening reactions may occur. Better management strategies could achieve by knowing more about drug-induced mucocutaneous presentations of COVID-19.
大多数药物都可能引起某些黏膜皮肤反应,COVID-19 药物也不例外,这是我们关注的焦点。我们系统地检索了数据库,直到 2020 年 8 月 15 日,在最初的 851 篇文章中,有 30 篇文章进入了这项研究(20 篇病例报告、4 项队列研究和 6 项对照临床试验)。反应的类型包括 AGEP、麻疹样药物疹、血管炎、DRESS 综合征、荨麻疹性血管炎等。在出现副作用之前,已经使用了治疗方法,包括:抗疟药、抗病毒药、抗生素、托珠单抗、依诺肝素等。在大流行期间,我们发现 0.004%至 4.15%的肯定药物引起的黏膜皮肤反应。从使用药物到出现皮疹的时间间隔从数小时到 1 个月不等;这与药物类型密切相关,羟氯喹似乎是平均间隔时间最长的药物。抗病毒药、抗疟药、阿奇霉素和托珠单抗是对抗药物不良反应最有效的药物,但抗病毒药尤其是与抗疟药联合使用时,是第一步。皮肤反应的类型通常是麻疹样/斑丘疹样红斑或荨麻疹样皮疹,大多数情况下,在数天内可以用类固醇治疗。在使用羟氯喹的情况下,应考虑特定的反应,如 AGEP。洛匹那韦/利托那韦是抗病毒药中使用最广泛的药物,皮肤不良反应发生率最高;利巴韦林和瑞德西韦也可能引起皮肤药物反应,但法匹拉韦没有或较少的不良反应。从逻辑上讲,抗病毒药物中皮肤科不良反应的发生率可能与它们的使用频率有关。很少情况下,可能会发生危及生命的反应。通过更多地了解 COVID-19 药物引起的黏膜皮肤表现,可以制定出更好的治疗策略。