| Literature DB >> 25749768 |
Marek L Kowalski1, Joanna S Makowska2.
Abstract
Frequent use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) has been paralleled by increasing occurrence of adverse reactions, which vary from mild local skin rashes or gastric irritation to severe, generalized symptoms and even life-threatening anaphylaxis. NSAID-induced hypersensitivity reactions may involve both immunological and non-immunological mechanisms and should be differentiated from type A adverse reactions. Clinical diagnosis and effective management of a hypersensitive patient cannot be achieved without identifying the underlying mechanism. In this review, we discuss the current classification of NSAID-induced adverse reactions and propose a practical diagnostic algorithm that involves 7 steps leading to the determination of the type of NSAID-induced hypersensitivity and allows for proper patient management.Entities:
Keywords: NSAID-induced hypersensitivity; Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; aspirin; aspirin hypersensitivity; drug allergy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25749768 PMCID: PMC4446629 DOI: 10.4168/aair.2015.7.4.312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy Asthma Immunol Res ISSN: 2092-7355 Impact factor: 5.764
Classification of NSAIDs according to chemical structure
| Group | Drugs |
|---|---|
| Salicylic acid derivates | Acetylsalicylic acid (Aspirin) |
| Sodium salicylate | |
| Diflunisal | |
| Salicylsalicylic acid | |
| Sulfasalazine | |
| Olsalazine | |
| Para-aminophenol derivatives | Acetaminophen |
| Indol and indene acetic acid | Indomethacin |
| Sulindac | |
| Etodolac | |
| Heteroaryl acetic acid | Ibuprofen |
| Neproxen | |
| Flurbiprofen | |
| Ketoprofen | |
| Fenoprofen | |
| Oxaprozin | |
| Anthranilic acid (fenemates) | Mefenamic acid |
| Meclofenamic acid | |
| Enolic acid derivatives (oxicams) | Piroxicam |
| Tenoxicam | |
| Meloxicam |
Fig. 1NSAIDs-induced adverse reactions.
Classification of NSAID-induced hypersensitivity reactions
| Type of Reaction | Name of reaction | Abbreviation | Definition | Previously used names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cross-reactive - non allergic (Non-immunologically mediated reactions) | NSAIDs exacerbated respiratory disease | NERD | Reaction manifesting primarily as bronchial obstruction, dyspnea and nasal congestion/rhinorrhea, occurring in patients with an underlying chronic airway respiratory disease (asthma/rhinosinusitis/nasal polyps). | |
| NSAIDs exacerbated cutaneous disease | NECD | Reaction manifesting as wheals and/or angioedema occurring in patients with a history of chronic spontaneous urticaria. | ||
| NSAIDs induced urticaria-angioedema | NIUA | Reaction manifesting as wheals and/or angioedema occurring in otherwise healthy subjects (without history of chronic spontaneous urticaria). Symptoms are induced by at least two NSAIDs with different chemical structure (not belonging to the same chemical group). | ||
| Selective-allergic (Immunologically mediated reactions) | Single NSAID-induced urticaria/angioedema or anaphylaxis | SNIUAAA | Immediate hypersensitivity reactions to a single NSAID or to several NSAIDs belonging to the same chemical group, manifesting as urticaria, angioedema and/or anaphylaxis. These subjects tolerate other chemically non-related NSAIDs, and usually do not have a history of chronic urticaria or asthma. | |
| NSAIDs-induced delayed hypersensitivity reactions | NIDHR | Reactions to a single NSAID developing more than 24 hours after drug administration and manifesting by either skin symptoms (exanthema, fixed drug eruption), other organ specific symptoms (e. g. renal, pulmonary) or severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCAR). |
Fig. 2Seven steps to the diagnosis of NSAID hypersensitivity reactions.