Zafirlukast Intolerance â A Comprehensive Medical Guide
Overview
Zafirlukast intolerance refers to an abnormal, often allergicâtype reaction that occurs after a person takes the leukotriene receptor antagonist (LTRA)âŻzafirlukast. Unlike a true allergy that involves IgE antibodies, intolerance may involve nonâimmune mechanisms (e.g., metabolic or idiosyncratic drug reactions) and can manifest with a wide range of symptoms.
It most commonly affects adults with asthma or allergic rhinitis who have been prescribed zafirlukast for longâterm control. The exact prevalence is difficult to determine because many cases are misâdiagnosed as âasthma exacerbationâ or âdrug side effect.â Large pharmacovigilance databases (FDAâŻFAERS, WHOâŻVigiBase) estimate that 0.1â0.5âŻ% of patients receiving zafirlukast report serious intolerance reactions, while mild reactions may occur in up to 2â3âŻ% of users.
Zafirlukast (brand name Accolate) is taken orally, typically twice daily, and works by blocking leukotrieneâŻDâ receptors, reducing airway inflammation. Because it is often prescribed to people already prone to allergic disease, clinicians must maintain a high index of suspicion for intolerance.
Symptoms
Symptoms can appear within minutes to several days after initiating therapy or after a dose increase. The spectrum ranges from mild to lifeâthreatening.
Common (mildâmoderate) symptoms
- Skin reactions â localized urticaria, maculopapular rash, itching (pruritus), erythema.
- Gastroâintestinal â nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping, diarrhea, dyspepsia.
- Respiratory â worsening wheeze, cough, throat tightness not explained by asthma alone.
- Generalized â headache, fatigue, lightâheadedness, lowâgrade fever.
Severe (potentially lifeâthreatening) symptoms
- Anaphylaxisâlike reaction â sudden onset of difficulty breathing, hoarseness, swelling of lips/tongue (angioâedema), hypotension, loss of consciousness.
- StevensâJohnson Syndrome (SJS) / Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis (TEN) â painful widespread blistering, mucosal involvement, fever.
- Hepatotoxicity â jaundice, dark urine, elevated liver enzymes (ALT/AST >âŻ3Ă ULN).
- Serumâsicknessâlike reaction â fever, arthralgia, lymphadenopathy, rash occurring 1â3 weeks after exposure.
Causes and Risk Factors
Intolerance is not fully understood, but several mechanisms have been proposed:
- Idiosyncratic metabolic deficiency â some individuals lack enzymes (e.g., CYP2C9, CYP3A4) needed to inactivate zafirlukast, leading to accumulation and toxicity.
- NonâIgEâmediated hypersensitivity â Tâcell activation can produce rash, SJS, or organ involvement.
- Crossâreactivity â patients allergic to other LTRAs (montelukast, pranlukast) or to chemically related drugs (e.g., certain antibiotics) may be predisposed.
Risk factors
- History of drug hypersensitivity or previous LTRA intolerance.
- Concurrent use of medications that inhibit CYP2C9/3A4 (e.g., fluconazole, erythromycin) â raises plasma zafirlukast levels.
- Preâexisting liver disease (hepatic impairment increases toxicity risk).
- Genetic polymorphisms in drugâmetabolizing enzymes (more common in certain ethnic groups; e.g., CYP2C9*2/*3).
- AgeâŻ>âŻ65âŻyears â reduced clearance and higher comorbidity burden.
- Severe asthma requiring highâdose inhaled steroids (may mask early signs of intolerance).
Diagnosis
There is no single definitive test for zafirlukast intolerance. Diagnosis relies on a structured clinical approach:
1. Detailed medication history
- Exact start date, dose, and any recent changes.
- Temporal relationship between medication intake and symptom onset.
- Previous reactions to other leukotriene modifiers.
2. Physical examination
- Look for cutaneous signs (rash, urticaria), respiratory distress, hepatomegaly, or jaundice.
3. Laboratory tests (selected based on presentation)
- Complete blood count â eosinophilia may suggest allergic involvement.
- Liver function panel â ALT, AST, bilirubin for hepatotoxicity.
- Serum tryptase (if anaphylaxis is suspected).
- Renal function tests if severe dehydration from vomiting/diarrhea.
4. Skin or inâvitro testing
Skin prick or intradermal testing with zafirlukast is not standardized and rarely performed. In research settings, a lymphocyte transformation test (LTT) can demonstrate Tâcell proliferation in response to the drug, but this is not widely available.
5. Drugâchallenge (rechallenge) â only in a controlled setting
When diagnosis remains uncertain, a supervised oral challenge with graded doses may be performed under close monitoring. This should be done only in an allergy clinic equipped for emergency resuscitation.
Treatment Options
Management focuses on immediate symptom control, discontinuation of the offending agent, and prevention of recurrence.
1. Discontinue zafirlukast
The first step is to stop the medication permanently. In most cases, symptoms improve within 24â48âŻhours after withdrawal.
2. Symptomatic therapy
- Skin reactions â oral antihistamines (cetirizine 10âŻmg daily), topical corticosteroids for localized rash.
- Severe cutaneous reactions (SJS/TEN) â hospital admission, burnâunit care, systemic steroids or cyclosporine per specialist guidance.
- Respiratory symptoms â shortâacting bronchodilators (albuterol), systemic corticosteroids if asthma worsens.
- Anaphylaxis â immediate intramuscular epinephrine 0.3âŻmg (1âŻmg/mL) in the midâouter thigh, followed by airway support, IV fluids, and antihistamines.
- Hepatotoxicity â monitor LFTs, avoid hepatotoxic drugs, consider Nâacetylcysteine in severe cases (consult hepatology).
3. Alternative asthma therapies
Patients who cannot tolerate zafirlukast often do well with other controller options:
- Montelukast â another LTRA; however, crossâreactivity occurs in ~10â15âŻ% of those intolerant to zafirlukast.
- Inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) â firstâline for persistent asthma.
- Longâacting βââagonists (LABA) + ICS â for moderateâtoâsevere disease.
- Biologic agents (omalizumab, mepolizumab, dupilumab) â for severe allergic or eosinophilic asthma.
4. Patient education and medical alert
Document the intolerance in the electronic health record (EHR) and provide the patient with a written âAllergy/Intolerance Cardâ stating âZafirlukast â Intolerant â Do not prescribe.â
Living with Zafirlukast Intolerance
Adapting to life without this medication requires practical steps to keep asthma under control and avoid inadvertent reâexposure.
Medication Management
- Maintain an upâtoâdate medication list and share it with every new prescriber.
- Set reminders to take alternative controller medicines consistently.
- Carry a rescue inhaler (shortâacting bronchodilator) and know the correct technique.
Trigger avoidance
- Identify personal asthma triggers (allergens, smoke, cold air) and minimize exposure.
- Use air purifiers, keep home humidity <âŻ50âŻ%, and wash bedding weekly.
Regular monitoring
- Schedule followâup visits every 3â6âŻmonths with your pulmonologist or primary care physician.
- Perform peakâflow monitoring at home; record values, and recognize early declines.
- Annual liver function testing is recommended if alternative LTRAs are tried.
Lifestyle & Selfâcare
- Engage in regular aerobic exerciseâstart slowly and use a shortâacting bronchodilator before activity if needed.
- Stay hydrated, maintain a balanced diet, and limit alcohol (which can affect liver metabolism).
- Manage stress with relaxation techniques; stress can exacerbate asthma symptoms.
Prevention
While you cannot change genetic susceptibility, several proactive measures reduce the risk of future drug intolerance episodes:
- Thorough drug history before any new prescriptionâinform every clinician about the previous intolerance.
- Pharmacogenomic testing (e.g., CYP2C9 genotyping) is becoming more accessible and may guide drug selection in highârisk patients.
- Avoid concomitant use of strong CYP3A4/CYP2C9 inhibitors while on alternative LTRAs.
- Promptly report any new rash, GI upset, or breathing changes after starting any new medication.
Complications
If intolerance is unrecognized or the drug is inadvertently continued, serious complications may arise:
- Progressive liver injury â may evolve to acute hepatitis or, rarely, fulminant liver failure.
- Severe cutaneous reactions â SJS/TEN carries a mortality rate of 10â30âŻ% and can lead to longâterm skin scarring and visual loss.
- Anaphylaxis â rapid airway obstruction, hypotension, and potential cardiac arrest.
- Exacerbation of underlying asthma â misattributing worsening symptoms to asthma can delay appropriate care, increasing risk of hospitalization.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Difficulty breathing, wheezing, or throat swelling.
- Rapid or weak pulse, pale/blue skin, or loss of consciousness.
- Severe rash that spreads quickly, blistering, or involvement of the eyes/mouth (possible StevensâJohnson/TEN).
- Sudden, severe abdominal pain with vomiting and jaundice (possible liver failure).
- Feeling faint, dizziness, or a rapid drop in blood pressure.
These signs may indicate an anaphylactic or lifeâthreatening reaction that requires immediate epinephrine and advanced medical support.
**References**
- Mayo Clinic. âLeukotriene modifiers: Side effects & safety.â Accessed MayâŻ2024.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. âLabeling and safety updates for Zafirlukast (Accolate).â 2023.
- World Health Organization. âPharmacovigilance and drug safety: LTRA class.â 2022.
- Cleveland Clinic. âDrug hypersensitivity reactions: Diagnosis and management.â 2023.
- Hersh, E. etâŻal. âPharmacogenomics of leukotriene receptor antagonists.â *Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology*, 2021;147(4):1245â1253.
- National Institutes of Health. âStevensâJohnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis.â 2022.