Drug Rashes

ByJulia Benedetti, MD, Harvard Medical School
Reviewed/Revised May 2024
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Drug rashes are a side effect of a medication that manifests as a skin reaction.

  • Drug rashes usually are caused by an allergic reaction to a medication, but some drug rashes are not allergic.

  • Typical symptoms include redness, bumps, blisters, hives, itching, and sometimes peeling, or pain.

  • Every medication a person takes may have to be stopped to figure out which one is causing the rash.

(See also Overview of Hypersensitivity and Reactive Skin Disorders.)

The word "rash" refers to changes in skin color (such as redness) and/or texture (such as bumps or swelling). Many rashes itch, such as those that often develop after an allergic reaction, but some rashes are painful or cause no symptoms.

Medications can cause rashes in several ways.

Allergic drug rashes

Most drug rashes result from an allergic reaction to a medication. Usually the reaction is to a medication taken by mouth or to a medication or illicit drug given by injection. The medication does not have to be applied to the skin to cause a drug rash.

When the immune system comes into contact with a medication (or illicit drug), it can become sensitive to that medication (a process called sensitization). Sometimes a person becomes sensitized to a medication after only one exposure, and other times sensitization occurs only after many exposures. Once a person is sensitized to a medication, later exposure to that medication triggers an allergic reaction, such as a rash.

Nonallergic drug rashes

Sometimes a rash develops directly without involving an allergic reaction. For example, corticosteroids and lithium may cause a rash that looks like acne, and anticoagulants (blood thinners) may cause bruising when blood leaks under the skin.

Certain medications make the skin particularly sensitive to the effects of sunlight or other sources of ultraviolet light (photosensitivity). These medications include certain antipsychotics, tetracyclines, sulfa antibiotics, hydrochlorothiazide, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). No rash appears when the medication is taken, but later exposure to the sun while taking the medication can cause photosensitivity.

Other rashes that result from medications are those that occur in Stevens-Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis, and erythema nodosum.

Symptoms of Drug Rashes

Drug rashes vary in severity from mild redness with tiny bumps over a small area to peeling of the entire skin. Rashes may appear suddenly within minutes after a person takes a medication, or they may be delayed for hours, days, or even weeks. Rashes may cause red, purple, blue, or gray discoloration. Some rashes are painful and may cause sores to form in the mouth.

Rash Caused by a Drug Reaction
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This photo shows a rash in a person who had an allergic reaction to a medication.
Photo courtesy of Anar Mikailov, MD, FAAD.

People with an allergic rash can have hives and/or other allergic symptoms, such as runny nose and watery eyes. They also may develop more significant symptoms such as wheezing or dangerously low blood pressure. Hives are very itchy, whereas some other drug rashes itch little, if at all.

Hives
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Hives are raised, itchy, and reddish spots on the skin.
Photo provided by Thomas Habif, MD.

Diagnosis of Drug Rashes

  • A doctor's review of all current prescription and over-the-counter medications

  • Stopping medications most likely to have caused the reaction to see whether rash goes away

  • Sometimes skin biopsy

Figuring out whether a medication is the cause of a rash may be difficult because a rash can result from only a tiny amount of a medication, it can erupt long after a person has first taken a medication, and it can persist for weeks or months after a person has stopped a medication. Every medication a person has taken is suspect, including those bought without a prescription, such as eye drops, nose drops, suppositories, and herbal products, so doctors review all of the prescription and over-the-counter medications a person is currently taking. Doctors try to determine whether the rash started shortly after a person began taking a medication. The medication most likely to be causing the rash will probably be stopped to see whether the rash goes away.

Sometimes the only way to determine which medication is causing a rash is to have the person stop taking all but life-sustaining medications. Whenever possible, chemically unrelated medications are substituted. If there are no such substitutes, the person starts taking the medications again one at a time to see which one causes the reaction. However, this method can be hazardous if the person has had a severe allergic reaction to the medication.

Occasionally, doctors apply reaction-causing substances, known as allergens, to the skin (called patch testing), which may be helpful for diagnosis of certain rashes. Sometimes, a sample of skin is removed and examined under a microscope (called a skin biopsy), particularly if doctors suspect a person has one of the more severe or unusual drug reactions.

Treatment of Drug Rashes

  • Stopping the responsible medication

  • For mild reactions, sometimes antihistamines and corticosteroid creams to relieve itching

  • For severe reactions, sometimes medications given intravenously and hospitalization

Most drug reactions go away when the responsible medication is stopped.

Standard itching treatments, such as antihistamines by mouth and corticosteroid creams, are used as needed.

Severe allergic skin reactions, particularly those accompanied by serious symptoms such as wheezing or difficulty breathing (called anaphylaxis

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