The term 'sulfa drug' refers to the class of medications called
sulfonamides. This class includes several
antibiotics, including
sulfamethoxazole,
sulfasalazine, and
sulfacetamide, among others.
It is important to make a distinction between sulfa drugs and other
sulfur-containing drugs and additives, such as
sulfates and
sulfites, which are chemically unrelated to the
sulfonamide group, and do not cause the same
hypersensitivity reactions seen in the
sulfonamides.
Functions
These antibiotics are used to treat
pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia,
urinary tract infections,
shigellosis, and certain protozoan infections.
The sulfonamide chemical moiety is also present in other medications that are not antimicrobials, including
thiazide diuretics (including
hydrochorothiazide,
metolazone, and
indapamide, among others),
sulfonylureas (including
glipizide,
glyburide, among others), and
acetazolamide.
Sulfasalazine, in addition to its use as an antibiotic, is also utilized in the treatment of
inflammatory bowel disease.
Adverse reactions
Approximately 3% of the general population have adverse reactions when treated with sulfonamide antimicrobials. Of note is the observation that patients with
HIV have a much higher prevalence, at about 60%
Practical issues in the management of hypersensitivity reactions: sulfonamides, SA Tilles, , , Southern Medical Journal, 2001 . People who have a hypersensitivity reaction to one member of the sulfonamide class are likely to have a similar reaction to others.
Hypersensitivity reactions are less common in non-antibiotic sulfonamides, and, though controversial, the available evidence suggests those with hypersensitivity to sulfonamide antibiotics do not have an increased risk of hypersensitivity reaction to the non-antibiotic agents
Sulfonamide hypersensitivity, CG Slatore, , , Immunology and Allergy Clinics of North America, 2004 .
Two regions of the sulfonamide antibiotic chemical structure are implicated in the hypersensitivity reactions associated with the class.
★ The first is the N1 heterocyclic ring, which causes a type I
hypersensitivity reaction.
★ The second is the N4 amino nitrogen that, in a stereospecific process, forms reactive metabolites that cause either direct cytotoxicity or immunologic response.
The non-antibiotic sulfonamides lack both of these structures
Likelihood and mechanisms of cross-allergenicity between sulfonamide antibiotics and other drugs containing a sulfonamide functional group, CC Brackett, , , Pharmacotherapy, 2004 .
The most common manifestation of a
hypersensitivity reaction to sulfa drugs are rash and hives. However, there are several life-threatening manifestations of hypersensitivity to sulfa drugs, including
Stevens-Johnson syndrome,
toxic epidermal necrolysis,
agranulocytosis,
hemolytic anemia,
thrombocytopenia, and
fulminant hepatic necrosis, among others
Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 13th Ed., , , , McGraw-Hill Inc., , .
References
Further Reading
★
ITM Online: Differentiating Sulfur Compounds