Dapsone: dosing, contraindications, cautions, adverse events, and monitoring
Dose and drug safety considerations . | Details . |
---|---|
Typical dosing regimens | |
Leprosy | 100 mg daily (in multiple drug regimens) |
Malaria prophylaxis | 100 mg weekly (with 12.5 mg pyrimethamine) |
Dermatitis herpetiformis | 50 mg daily titrated to 300 mg daily if required. In responding patients, reduced to the minimum effective dose (typically 25-100 mg). |
Contraindications | Include hypersensitivity to sulphonamides or sulphones, severe anemia, porphyria, and severe glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency |
Cautions | Cardiac or pulmonary disease, anemia, and G6PD or methemoglobin reductase deficiency. |
Adverse events | |
Hemolysis | Occurs in most patients above 200 mg (or above 50 mg if G6PD deficiency). At 100-150 mg, hemoglobin falls by 2 0g/L in ∼10%. Treatment does not need to be interrupted for mild hemolysis. |
Methemoglobinemia | Cyanosis may be visible at levels >3%. Tachycardia, headache, nausea, weakness, and abdominal pain may occur at higher levels. |
Hypersensitivity reaction | May present with rash (can be severe, eg, erythema multiforme, exfoliative dermatitis), fever, lymphadenopathy, hepatic dysfunction, or leukocytosis. Prevalence 1.4%. Most cases are within 6 weeks of onset. 10% fatality. Stop drug, consider systemic steroids. |
Peripheral neuropathy | Rare. Primarily motor. Complete resolution typical with dose reduction or withdrawal |
Other effects | Agranulocytosis, rash, photosensitivity, pruritis, tachycardia, headache, hepatitis, insomnia, psychosis, anorexia, nausea, and vomiting |
Laboratory monitoring | |
Baseline | Complete blood count (CBC) with differential and reticulocyte counts |
Liver and renal function | |
G6PD level | |
Follow-up | CBC with differential and reticulocyte counts every 2 weeks for 3 months and then every 3-4 months (increase frequency if dose is increased) |
Liver and renal function every 3-4 months | |
Methemoglobin as clinically indicated |
Dose and drug safety considerations . | Details . |
---|---|
Typical dosing regimens | |
Leprosy | 100 mg daily (in multiple drug regimens) |
Malaria prophylaxis | 100 mg weekly (with 12.5 mg pyrimethamine) |
Dermatitis herpetiformis | 50 mg daily titrated to 300 mg daily if required. In responding patients, reduced to the minimum effective dose (typically 25-100 mg). |
Contraindications | Include hypersensitivity to sulphonamides or sulphones, severe anemia, porphyria, and severe glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency |
Cautions | Cardiac or pulmonary disease, anemia, and G6PD or methemoglobin reductase deficiency. |
Adverse events | |
Hemolysis | Occurs in most patients above 200 mg (or above 50 mg if G6PD deficiency). At 100-150 mg, hemoglobin falls by 2 0g/L in ∼10%. Treatment does not need to be interrupted for mild hemolysis. |
Methemoglobinemia | Cyanosis may be visible at levels >3%. Tachycardia, headache, nausea, weakness, and abdominal pain may occur at higher levels. |
Hypersensitivity reaction | May present with rash (can be severe, eg, erythema multiforme, exfoliative dermatitis), fever, lymphadenopathy, hepatic dysfunction, or leukocytosis. Prevalence 1.4%. Most cases are within 6 weeks of onset. 10% fatality. Stop drug, consider systemic steroids. |
Peripheral neuropathy | Rare. Primarily motor. Complete resolution typical with dose reduction or withdrawal |
Other effects | Agranulocytosis, rash, photosensitivity, pruritis, tachycardia, headache, hepatitis, insomnia, psychosis, anorexia, nausea, and vomiting |
Laboratory monitoring | |
Baseline | Complete blood count (CBC) with differential and reticulocyte counts |
Liver and renal function | |
G6PD level | |
Follow-up | CBC with differential and reticulocyte counts every 2 weeks for 3 months and then every 3-4 months (increase frequency if dose is increased) |
Liver and renal function every 3-4 months | |
Methemoglobin as clinically indicated |