Abstract
A Burmese boy being treated with dapsone (diaminodiphenylsulfone [DDS]), 100 mg daily, for lepromatous leprosy had a fatal reaction to the drug 3 wk after therapy was started. The clinical symptoms and progression of illness conform well to a DDS syndrome first described in the early 1950s. Although the syndrome clinically resembles infectious mononucleosis, neither Epstein-Barr virus nor cytomegalovirus was implicated as an etiologic agent in this case. The syndrome was recognized during initiation of dapsone therapy for lepromatous leprosy and led to the use of a prolonged induction period with initial dosages as low as 25 mg/wk. Because dapsone resistance was recognized in some strains of Mycobacterium leprae, slow induction of therapy was replaced with the schedule used for this patient. This report of a fatal reaction to dapsone emphasizes the need for caution when initiating therapy with the drug at full dosage.

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