Nine more people have died of their injuries this week after the October 30 tragedy at the capital's Colectiv club, when fireworks let off during a rock band's performance triggered a blaze and a stampede as panicked revellers tried to get out.
The fire sparked mass anti-government protests, with many viewing compromised safety standards at the club as emblematic of Romania's wider problem with rampant corruption.
Prime Minister Victor Ponta, who had been under pressure for weeks as he goes on trial on corruption charges, quit on Wednesday, saying it was right for top officials to take responsibility for the tragedy.
The two others -- one Romanian and one Italian national -- passed away in the Netherlands, where they had been transported on Friday for treatment, interim prime minister Sorin Campeanu told a press conference.
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Six more blaze victims are still being treated in Dutch burn units, and are said to be in a serious condition.
Overall around a hundred people, most of them young, remain hospitalised -- dozens of them in critical condition, according to the Romanian government.
The club's three bosses, detained since Tuesday on manslaughter charges, did not have the authorisation to host concerts, let alone pyrotechnic shows.
Ponta's resignation has not stemmed the huge protests by Romanians demanding a "profound change" in the way the country is governed.
Some 3,000 people again demonstrated in Bucharest yesterday, while hundreds more protested in the cities of Cluj and Sibiu in the north, and Timisoara in the west.
"Romania, wake up!" chanted protesters gathered at Bucharest's University Square, the epicentre of the 1989 revolt that toppled the dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.