Toxic epidermal necrolysis
Background
- Severe, life-threatening mucocutaneous reaction characterized by widespread epidermal necrosis and detachment
- Represents a spectrum with Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS):
- SJS: <10% body surface area (BSA) detachment
- SJS-TEN overlap: 10-30% BSA detachment
- TEN: >30% BSA detachment
- Medications are the cause in 80-95% of cases
- Most common: sulfonamides, anticonvulsants (carbamazepine, phenytoin, lamotrigine), allopurinol, NSAIDs, penicillins
- Typically occurs 1-3 weeks after drug initiation
- Other triggers: Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection (especially in children), HIV, malignancy
- Mortality: 25-35% for TEN, 1-5% for SJS
- HLA-B*5801 (allopurinol) and HLA-B*1502 (carbamazepine) associated with increased risk
Clinical Features
- Prodrome (1-3 days before skin findings):
- Fever, malaise, myalgias, arthralgias, painful skin, pharyngitis
- Skin findings:
- Tender erythematous or dusky macules → confluent areas of necrosis
- Flaccid bullae with full-thickness epidermal detachment
- Positive Nikolsky sign (lateral pressure causes epidermal separation)
- Positive Asboe-Hansen sign (pressure on blister causes lateral extension)
- Skin sloughs in sheets, leaving raw denuded dermis
- Mucosal involvement (present in >90% of cases):
- Oral (painful erosions, inability to eat/drink)
- Ocular (conjunctivitis, corneal erosions — ophthalmology emergency)
- Genitourinary (dysuria, urinary retention)
- Respiratory (tracheobronchial sloughing may cause respiratory failure)
- Systemic complications:
- Sepsis (leading cause of death)
- Hypovolemia and electrolyte disorders
- Acute kidney injury
- DIC
Differential Diagnosis
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome (same spectrum, <10% BSA)
- Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS) — superficial cleavage plane, no mucosal involvement, children
- Exfoliative drug eruptions
- Pemphigus vulgaris
- Acute graft-versus-host disease
- Generalized bullous fixed drug eruption
- Toxic shock syndrome
Erythematous rash
- Positive Nikolsky’s sign
- Febrile
- Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (children)
- Toxic epidermal necrolysis/SJS (adults)
- Afebrile
- Febrile
- Negative Nikolsky’s sign
- Febrile
- Afebrile
Evaluation
- Clinical diagnosis based on:
- History of drug exposure within preceding 1-4 weeks
- Prodrome of fever and malaise
- Positive Nikolsky sign
- Mucosal erosions with skin detachment
- Labs:
- CBC (leukopenia and thrombocytopenia = poor prognosis)
- BMP (acute kidney injury, electrolyte derangements)
- LFTs (hepatic involvement in ~10%)
- Coagulation studies (DIC screening)
- Blood cultures (if febrile)
- Lactate
- Skin biopsy: full-thickness epidermal necrosis (distinguishes from SSSS)
- SCORTEN severity score (assess within first 24 hours):[1]
- Age >40, malignancy, HR >120, initial BSA detachment >10%, BUN >28, glucose >252, bicarb <20
- Score ≥3 = mortality >35%; Score ≥5 = mortality >90%
Management
Immediate
- Discontinue ALL suspected causative medications immediately
- Early drug withdrawal (within 24h of blister onset) improves survival
- Manage as a burn patient — transfer to burn center when stable
- Fluid resuscitation:
- Less than typical burn (use 2/3 Parkland formula or ~2-3 mL/kg/%BSA/day)
- Target UOP 0.5-1 mL/kg/hr
- Wound care:
- Minimize handling; leave intact bullae when possible
- Non-adherent dressings (e.g., Aquacel, petrolatum gauze)
- Do NOT debride attached skin
- Temperature regulation: raise ambient temperature to 30-32°C
Supportive
- Pain control: IV opioids, avoid NSAIDs if suspected trigger
- Nutrition: early enteral nutrition via NG tube if unable to eat
- DVT prophylaxis
- Eye care: urgent ophthalmology consult, preservative-free lubricating drops, amniotic membrane grafting for severe involvement
- Mouth care: antiseptic mouthwash, viscous lidocaine
- Infection monitoring: avoid prophylactic antibiotics (increases resistance); culture if signs of sepsis
- Foley catheter if GU involvement
Specific Therapies (Controversial)
- Cyclosporine 3-5 mg/kg/day: best available evidence for mortality reduction
- IVIG: conflicting data, some protocols use 1-2 g/kg over 3-4 days
- Systemic corticosteroids: controversial; short pulse may be considered early
- TNF-α inhibitors (etanercept): emerging evidence for benefit
Disposition
- All patients require admission, preferably to a burn center ICU
- Consults: dermatology, ophthalmology, burn surgery
- Patients may require weeks-months of wound care and rehabilitation
- Long-term complications: skin scarring, ocular sequelae (symblepharon, blindness), genital stenosis
- Document causative drug allergy prominently in medical record
See Also
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
- Drug eruptions
- Erythema multiforme
- Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome
- Burns
References
- Schwartz RA, McDonough PH, Lee BW. Toxic epidermal necrolysis. Part I: Introduction, history, classification, clinical features, systemic manifestations, etiology, and immunopathogenesis. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2013;69(2):173.e1-13. PMID 23866878
- Schwartz RA, McDonough PH, Lee BW. Toxic epidermal necrolysis. Part II: Prognosis, sequelae, diagnosis, differential diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2013;69(2):187.e1-16. PMID 23866879
- Sekula P, et al. Comprehensive survival analysis of a cohort of patients with Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis. J Invest Dermatol. 2013;133(5):1197-1204. PMID 23389396
- Gonzalez-Herrada C, et al. Cyclosporine use in epidermal necrolysis is associated with an important mortality reduction. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2017;139(2):607-615. PMID 27448444
- Bastuji-Garin S, et al. SCORTEN: a severity-of-illness score for toxic epidermal necrolysis. J Invest Dermatol. 2000;115(2):149-153. PMID 10951229
- ↑ Bastuji-Garin S, et al. SCORTEN: a severity-of-illness score for toxic epidermal necrolysis. J Invest Dermatol. 2000;115(2):149-153. PMID 10951229
