AbstractCutaneous adverse drug reactions (cADR) should be appropriately managed in drug administration. LANSAP®, Rabecure® and VONOSAP® are currently used for Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy. Here, we examined the characteristics of cADR caused by these drugs using data from the Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA). Periods subject to analyses were set according to the year of release of these drugs: (i) from 2008 to 2017 for LANSAP; (ii) from 2014 to 2017 for Rabecure; and (iii) 2017 for VONOSAP. Among all cADR reported to the PMDA, those attributed to LANSAP, Rabecure and VONOSAP accounted for 2.3%, 1.0% and 3.6% of cases, respectively. cADR occurred in patients aged in their 20s or older, with the oldest patients aged in their 60s. Numbers of male and female patients were 28 and 70 for LANSAP, eight and 14 for Rabecure and three and 16 for VONOSAP, respectively. Statistical analyses revealed significant sex differences for LANSAP (P = 0.022) and VONOSAP (P = 0.012), but not for Rabecure (P = 0.729). LANSAP, Rabecure or VONOSAP caused erythema multiforme in the largest population of patients and Stevens–Johnson syndrome/toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS/TEN) in three patients. Ratios of SJS/TEN were 0.0–5.3% for LANSAP, Rabecure or VONOSAP, but 11.5–44.8% for the corresponding single constituent drugs other than vonoprazan. In conclusion, female sex appears to represent a risk factor for cADR attributed to H. pylori eradication therapy using LANSAP or VONOSAP, although H. pylori eradication therapy without these drugs rarely causes severe cADR.