“…A retrospective descriptive study in a teaching hospital in Sudan found significant numbers of severe cADRs involving various antibiotics where ciprofloxacin was the greatest offender (41.46% of FDE, EM-Major, SJS and TEN). Other ABs or AMs involved were artesunate (12.2% of EM-Major, SJS, TEN), penicillin (7.32% of EM-Major, SJS), sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim (7.32% of SJS, TEN, SJS/TEN overlap), norfloxacin (7.32% of TEN), amoxycillin (4.88% of SJS, TEN), ceftriaxone (4.88% of SJS, TEN) and ampicillin-cloxacillin, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, Fansidar (sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine), erythromycin, clarithromycin and tetracycline caused 2.4% each of SJS, TEN and EM-Major reactions [101]. There is a wide variation in the frequency of various types of cADRs in the studies reviewed.…”