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Tim Lancaster a Imperial Cancer Research Fund General Practice
Research Group, University of Oxford, Division of Public Health and
Primary Care, Institute of Health Sciences, Oxford, OX3 7LF, b The Boston
Collaborative Drug Surveillance Program, Boston University Medical
Center, Lexington, MA 02173, USA
Correspondence to: Dr Lancaster
Tim.Lancaster{at}dphpc.ox.ac.uk
An editorial in the BMJ recommended
discontinuation of the routine use of chloramphenicol eye drops largely
on the basis of case reports suggesting an association between their
use and serious haematological toxicity, particularly aplastic
anaemia.1 Although this recommendation has been
challenged, the debate has not been informed by reliable estimates of
the size of any risk.2
Around 400 general practices in the United Kingdom contribute
anonymised data to the general practice research database. They record
prescriptions and diagnoses from consultations and hospital letters.
Use of the data for drug safety studies is well
validated.3 In particular, previous studies have shown
that it can be used reliably to detect associations between drug
exposure and haematological toxicity.4 We used the
database to describe prescribing patterns of chloramphenicol eye drops
and to estimate the risk of aplastic anaemia after their use.
We identified all patients who received at least one prescription
for chloramphenicol eye drops between January 1988 and April 1995. We
reviewed the computer records of patients with a new diagnosis of any
of the following conditions occurring up to 90 days after such a
prescription: aplastic anaemia, thrombocytopenia, agranulocytosis,
leucopenia or neutropenia, unspecified white blood cell disorders,
blood dyscrasia (International Classification of
Diseases, eighth revision, codes 284.9, 287.1, 288.0, 288.1, 288.9, 289.9).
A total of 442 543 patients received 674 148 prescriptions for
chloramphenicol eye drops. 314 205 patients (71%) received one
prescription; 115 061 (26%) had between two and four prescriptions, and 13 276 (3%) had five or more. Use was higher in the younger age
groups. Around 30% of children aged 0-9 years received one or more
prescriptions compared with 8% of those aged 10-44 years and 5% of
those aged 45 or more.
We identified three patients with serious haematological toxicity and
one who developed mild, transient leucopenia that was not considered
serious. One of the serious cases, a boy with epilepsy, was admitted to
hospital with red cell aplasia 72 days after a prescription for
chloramphenicol eye drops. He had received four prescriptions over a
five year period, two of them in the three months preceding admission.
He had stopped taking lamotrigine six weeks before because he had
developed Stevens-Johnson syndrome and had started treatment with
phenytoin three weeks before developing red cell aplasia. The patient
presented with severe anaemia and bone marrow biopsy confirmed red cell
aplasia. Phenytoin was discontinued and he was given a blood
transfusion and treated with folic acid. He recovered fully. Clinical
opinion was that the lamotrigine or phenytoin treatment was probably
the cause of the aplasia. Thus, a causal association with
chloramphenicol seems unlikely. The second serious case was a woman in
her 60s with cirrhosis of the liver; she developed pancytopenia 71 days
after a single course of chloramphenicol eye drops. She was not
admitted to hospital and reported no symptoms. The last serious case
was a woman in her 80s who had melaena seven days after a prescription
for chloramphenicol eye drops. She was found to have pancytopenia and
died from gastrointestinal bleeding 12 weeks later.
Even in the unlikely event that all three cases were caused by
chloramphenicol eye drops, these data indicate that the risk of serious
haematological toxicity after treatment with ocular chloramphenicol is
in the order of 3 per 442 543 patients or 3 per 674 148
prescriptions.
The risk of serious haematological toxicity attributable to
chloramphenicol eye drops is small. Chloramphenicol eye drops are cheap
and effective. Their continued use for eye infections seems to be a
safe clinical strategy.
Contributors: TL initiated the study hypothesis. TL, AMS, and
HJ participated equally in the design, analysis, and writing of this
report.
Funding: The Boston Collaborative Drug Surveillance Program is
supported in part by grants from Astra Hässle, Bayer, Berlex Laboratories, Boots Healthcare International, Ciba-Geigy,
GlaxoWellcome, Hoechst, RW Johnson Pharmaceutical Research Institute,
Merck Research Laboratories, Organon, and Pfizer.
Conflict of interest: None.
(Accepted 20 May 1997)
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Subjects, methods, and results
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Comment
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References
© BMJ 1998