Drug Allergies
Chat Highlights
January 15, 2003
Norma Devine, Editor
On Wednesday, January 15, 2003,
Dr.
Rick Wilson, a glaucoma specialist at Wills, and the glaucoma
chat group discussed "Drug Allergies."
Moderator: The topic
tonight is glaucoma drug allergies. Dr. Rick, which glaucoma
medications cause the most allergies?
Dr. Rick Wilson: The
order of the allergies that I see, starting with the most frequent,
is: (1) Iopidine, (2) Alphagan, (3) Propine, (4) Azopt,
(5) Trusopt, (6) Timoptic/Betagan, (7) Ocupress, (8) pilocarpine.
The longer the patient is on the medication, the greater is the
chance of an allergic reaction.
P: Does a patient develop
an allergy to the medications over time, or do reactions
start within a week of trying a new one?
Dr. Rick Wilson: With
Epifrin, an older glaucoma medication, 50% of patients were allergic
to it by five years. So you could show no signs of allergy
at four years and get it the next week.
Moderator: How about
the newer medications?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Xalatan,
Travatan, and Lumigan may be toxic to the cornea or conjunctiva,
but the allergic rate is low, in my experience. Red, irritated
eyes are often seen without allergy. For most eyedrops,
allergies are usually in the 5 to 13% range.
P: Does an allergic
reaction mean the drug is not lowering IOP (intraocular pressure)?
Dr. Rick Wilson: No.
The drug can work very well and still cause an allergic reaction.
P: Is episcleritis
a sign of an allergy?
Dr. Rick Wilson: No.
Episcleritis is just an inflammation of the superficial sclera.
It may be a sign of an autoimmune problem, or the cause may be
unknown.
P: What is the difference
between an allergy and a side effect?
Dr. Rick Wilson: An
allergy is a side effect, as would be a change in iris color
or shortness of breath.
P: Do patients run
out of options for medications because of allergic reactions or
because the medications lose effectiveness?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Allergy
is usually more of an issue than loss of effect, although that
can be seen as well. Patients can also be allergic to the
preservative in each of the drops, which is distinct from the
medication itself and the vehicle which carries it (usually an
artificial tear solution). There are only a few kinds of
preservative that are used in all kinds of drops.
P: Could an allergy
to eyedrops cause hives?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Yes,
for sure. Some internists discount (the possible allergic
effect of) eyedrops because the volume is small. But the drops
can go down the tear duct onto the nasal mucosa. The mucosa
is very vascular and absorbs almost all of the drug that hits
it, so it is almost like injecting the medicine intravenously.
P: Does occluding the
tear ducts avoid or delay developing an allergy to the drops?
Dr. Rick Wilson: No,
but it markedly decreases the amount of the drug that hits the
body.
P: The last few days
I have had a bad case of hives. Is it possible that I could
be allergic to my eye drops? I use Travatan and Alphagan.
Dr. Rick Wilson: Unusual,
but possible. Occasionally, we see a rash from Trusopt or
Azopt.
P: What does an allergic
reaction look like? Red eyes?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Usually
the blood vessels on the white of the eye are dilated, giving
the eye a red, occasionally watery, look with tiny bumps lining
the lids. The lids may also be red, swollen, and scaly if
the allergy is chronic.
P: Would this explain
"itchy" eyes?
Dr. Rick Wilson: That
could be an environmental allergy or a medicinal allergy.
Itching is usually caused by an allergy.
P: I get headaches
with Travatan. Is that an allergic reaction?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Headaches
are not usually due to allergy. Travatan is usually metabolized
in the blood stream very quickly, so systemic side effects are
rare, but possible.
P: Does an allergy
to one medication increase the possibility of being allergic to
other medications?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Yes.
P: Can an allergic
reaction to drops ever create a chain reaction that eventually
damages the optic nerve or retina?
Dr. Rick Wilson: An
allergic reaction to lens material that is liberated in the eye
is called phacoanaphylaxis and is a very dangerous and damaging
reaction. However, the reaction is to an antigen inside
the eye, not one dropped onto the outside of the eye.
P: Is there a danger
in ignoring an allergic reaction and continuing to use the medication?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Yes.
The allergy causes changes in the conjunctiva, or top layer
of the eye, that are long-standing and decrease the success of
a surgical procedure for glaucoma, if surgery is performed. It
may also cause a dry eye and conjunctival scarring.
P: Are medications
available to counteract the reactions?
Dr. Rick Wilson: They
can suppress the reaction, but not counteract it.
P: Since other allergies,
such as hay fever, can affect the eyes, how do you determine
the cause of the reaction?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Usually
there will be a time relationship between the allergen and the
itching. So I ask my patients to keep track of what they
have come in contact with just before their eyes start to itch.
P: Is there such a
thing as an acute allergy to the drugs?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Yes,
if you have been sensitized to the drug before, developed
an allergy to it, and then were later exposed to it again, the
reaction will usually begin much more rapidly.
P: I use Alphagan P,
and now and then develop a rash on my neck. Is this one
of the known allergic reactions to Alphagan P?
Dr. Rick Wilson: It
is possible. I would try closing my tear duct to reduce
the amount of medicine getting into the body, and see if that
has any effect on the rash.
P: I had serious, unrecognized
systemic problems with timolol for many years. Even after
that bad experience years ago, recently I was very slow to suspect
that Azopt might be the cause of a continuing allergy. The
symptoms were rhinitis, sporadic facial hives, and quasi-chills.
I felt bad, too, fighting off sinus infections all of the time.
Dr. Weitzman said it was a sulfa sensitivity. Do you think
it could have been the preservative? No other drop has ever
caused that trouble.
Dr. Rick Wilson: No,
I think it was most probably the Azopt. Preservatives usually
cause a local allergy, and not systemic side effects.
P: Are some drops irritating
in the beginning and then the eyes tolerate the drop?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Yes,
Trusopt is a good example of that. Lumigan is the granddaddy
of the starting red eye that often improves over the first two
weeks.
P: So intense stinging
doesn't necessarily denote an allergy?
Dr. Rick Wilson: No,
it is not an allergy. The usual cause is a dry eye that
leaves little bare spots on the front of the cornea. Most
drops are usually slightly acidic, compared to tears, to improve
the shelf life of the medication. When the acidic solution
hits those bare spots on the cornea, it can really burn.
P: Is the dry eye that
develops when using glaucoma drops considered an allergic reaction
to the medication?
Dr. Rick Wilson: It
can be an allergic or toxic reaction.
P: I had a fiercely
bad reaction to prednisone, which I was once given for a back
problem. At the hospital where I was taken, I was told I
was allergic to the drug and should not take it again. If
I ever need steroid treatment for my eyes, what would my options
be?
Dr. Rick Wilson: I
would try non-steroidal medication first. Drugs like
Motrin are available as drops. It is unlikely you were really
allergic to prednisone, since prednisone is a synthetic form of
a hormone in the body. However, higher doses of prednisone
can cause bad systemic side effects.
P: I was diagnosed
with early-stage, normal-tension glaucoma in December last year.
My visual field test was normal. I take Clarinex for allergies,
as needed. Does Alphagan P have any adverse drug reaction
with Clarinex?
Dr. Rick Wilson: Usually
not. I've never seen it.
P: How effective are
mast cell stabilizers (sodium chromoglycate, etc.) in treating
allergy to other drops?
Dr. Rick Wilson: They
help, but can't make up for the chronic allergic stimulation.
P: You said that the
eyelids may be red, swollen and scaly if the allergy is chronic;
if the allergy is acute, the patient would have a rapid reaction
to the medication if it is reintroduced at a later time.
I don't understand, then, the effect of a chronic reaction.
I developed swollen red eyelids and very red eyes when using Alphagan.
What does that chronic reaction mean to me (as opposed to an acute
reaction)?
Dr. Rick Wilson: The
scaling takes more time to develop than just the red swollen lid.
P: After about six
weeks of using glaucoma eyedrops, is it normal for side effects,
such as irritation, to increase?
Dr. Rick Wilson: I
would not want to say that side effects are normal. Some
side effects, like the redness caused by Lumigan, often improve
with time. Others get worse.
P: My two-year-old
child was on Cosopt, then went to Timoptic and is now back on
Cosopt. I give it to her at night, right after I take her
aphakic contacts out, but she cries and says it burns. I
tried to give it to her in the morning, but the Cosopt seemed
to make her very moody and cranky. Is there a best time
to give the Cosopt, four times a day? I heard the morning is best,
because pressure is highest in the morning. Is there anything
I can do to decrease the irritation?
Dr. Rick Wilson: You
are most likely right on both issues. If the Cosopt burns,
I would change to Timoptic XE and Azopt. The Timoptic should
be once a day; the Azopt twice. Cosopt contains both Timoptic
and Trusopt. Azopt is a similar drop to Trusopt, but causes
less burning when instilled in irritated eyes, such as those with
contacts.
P: Dr. Wilson, before
you leave I want to tell you that you have helped me understand
my new diagnosis better after reading the chat highlights. Thank
you so much!
Dr. Rick Wilson: My
pleasure. That's what makes missing time from my family worthwhile.
Have a good week, everyone.
End of highlights for January 15, 2003.
On January 22, Dr. Wilson discussed "Blood Flow to the Eye"
in the Chat room. Click here for highlights
of that meeting.
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