Severe, life-threatening mucocutaneous drug reactions characterized by extensive epidermal necrosis and detachment, accompanied by mucosal involvement and systemic symptoms.
Definition
They represent a clinical spectrum, differentiated by the extent of body surface area (BSA) detachment:
Condition | BSA Detachment |
SJS | <10% |
SJS/TEN overlap | 10–30% |
TEN (Weil’s Disease) | >30% |
Aetiology
High-risk drugs
Drug Group | Examples |
Anticonvulsants | Lamotrigine, Carbamazepine, Phenytoin |
Allopurinol | Very common trigger |
Sulfonamide antibiotics | Cotrimoxazole, Sulfasalazine |
β-lactam antibiotics | Penicillin, Cephalosporins |
NSAIDs (oxicams) | Piroxicam, Tenoxicam |
Antiretrovirals | Nevirapine |
Other triggers: infections (Mycoplasma pneumoniae), vaccines (rare).
Pathogenesis
- Type IV (delayed) hypersensitivity reaction
- Drug or metabolite interacts with keratinocyte surface antigens → activation of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells & NK cells
- Release of granulysin, perforin, granzyme B, and Fas-FasL-mediated apoptosis
- → Massive keratinocyte apoptosis → epidermal necrolysis
Granulysin is considered the main cytotoxic mediator.
Clinical presentation
Prodromal phase (1–3 days before rash)
- Fever
- Malaise
- Sore throat
- Cough
- Arthralgia
- Burning eyes
Cutaneous signs
- Dusky-red macules or atypical target lesions
- Rapid progression to bullae and epidermal detachment
- Nikolsky sign positive (skin peels with pressure)
- Pain > pruritus

Distribution
- Trunk → face → generalized involvement
- Palms/soles may be affected
Mucosal involvement (>90% cases)
A hallmark feature
- Oral mucositis
- Hemorrhagic crusting lips
- Conjunctivitis, corneal ulceration
- Genital erosions
Severity Indicators
- Extensive necrolysis
- Multiorgan involvement (renal, respiratory, GI)
Investigations
Clinical diagnosis based on:
- Recent drug exposure
- Typical mucocutaneous lesions — Conjunctivitis & Stomatitis
- Positive Nikolsky sign & skin detachment
Investigations
Test | Purpose |
CBC | Lymphopenia may occur |
LFT, RFT | Evaluate organ involvement |
Electrolytes | Assess fluid balance |
Skin biopsy | Full-thickness epidermal necrosis |
Management
Immediate withdrawal of causative drug
Most critical step — earlier cessation improves survival.
Supportive care (similar to burn management)
Aspect | Intervention |
Fluid & electrolyte balance | IV fluids based on BSA loss — 10-20 cc/kg/IV RL |
Wound care | Non-adhesive dressings |
Temperature regulation | Warm environment |
Nutrition | High-calorie support |
Pain control | Opioids/analgesics |
Infection prevention | Strict asepsis (no routine antibiotics) |
Systemic therapy (specialist guided)
Evidence still evolving.
Options:
- IVIG
- Systemic corticosteroids (early phase)
- Cyclosporine
- TNF-α inhibitors (Etanercept) — promising results
Mucosal care
- Ocular consult mandatory (risk of blindness)
- Lubricants, topical antibiotics, amniotic membrane transplantation if needed