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fever
eosinophilia
leukocytosis
3 Lack of exposure to another drug that may cause a similar clinical picture.
Reference
Review
The review was an extensive computer search of English, French, german and Spanish
literature up to the end of 1990 for cases of AHS from which patient, treatment and clinical
data were extracted.
Results
There were 101 cases, 68 of whom were men. There were 27 deaths.
The age range was 25-89 years with a mean of about 58 years. Many patients had chronic
illnesses including hypertension, chronic renal failure (both in about half), diabetes and
congestive heart failure (in about a fifth). Concomitant medicines were commonly diuretics
(61 cases), with thiazide diuretics in 38 cases.
Doses of allopurinol were in the range of 100 mg to 400 mg, with the most common dose of
300 mg. The most frequent indication was asymptomatic hyperuricaemia (76 cases) and
established or suspected gout (20 cases). The onset of AHS ranged from 1 to 728 days after
starting therapy, with an average of 47 days.
Signs and symptoms were as shown in Table 1, with skin rash, fever, renal failure and AST
elevation being the most common.
Number
Percent
Skin rash
94/101
93
Fever
58/61
95
Renal failure
57/68
84
AST elevation
44/50
88
Eosinophilia
46/77
60
Leukocytosis
33/82
40
Comment
This is a useful review and discussion on AHS, limited to being now over a decade old.
Though there are 101 cases of AHS in the literature several hundreds of millions of
allopurinol doses are used annually, and though it is not possible to give an absolute risk, it
does appear to be rare.
Moreover, that risk may also be partly avoidable, in that three-quarters of these cases were
taking allopurinol for asymptomatic hyperuricaemia.