Trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole (TMP-SMZ) is considered a safe drug for treatment of infectious bacterial diseases in children. Side-effects are rare and generally take the form of a hypersensitivity reaction to the sulphamethoxazole component of the drug. Hepatic injury usually presents as a transient elevation of liver enzymes, which is of little clinical relevance. Fulminant liver failure due to TMP-SMZ has been reported in only six adults and never in children. We here report a 5-year-old girl who developed fulminant liver failure 3 weeks after her third exposure to TMP-SMZ. After a biphasic clinical course she underwent successful liver transplantation.
Conclusion: Trimethoprim-Sulphamethoxazole may cause fulminant liver failure in children. The disease can run a biphasic clinical course and liver transplantation must be considered as the therapeutic option for these patients.