[Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole-induced cholestatic hepatitis. Clinico-immunological demonstration of its allergic origin].
Sleutelwoorden
Abstract
METHODS
A 22-year-old woman was given trimethoprim plus sulphamethoxazole for a urinary infection (160 and 800 mg, respectively, daily), drugs she had not previously taken. After 2 weeks she noticed a rash of small spots on her trunk. In addition she had nausea and vomiting. The rash faded within 2 days of stopping the drug, but progressive jaundice developed.
METHODS
SGPT and SGOT concentrations rose to maximally 328 and 83 U/l, total bilirubin to maximally 5.9 mg/dl. There was no evidence for viral hepatitis (B or C, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr), autoimmune hepatitis or primary biliary hepatitis. Liver biopsy showed central acinar cholestasis, which suggested drug-induced liver damage.
RESULTS
The patient's symptoms regressed over several weeks without any specific treatment and 8 weeks after onset of the rash the laboratory tests also became normal. The allergic cause of the cholestatic hepatitis was confirmed by a lymphocyte transformation test.
CONCLUSIONS
Clinical suspicion of drug allergy as cause of a cholestatic hepatitis can be confirmed reliably and without any risk to the patient with the lymphocyte transformation test.