| Literature DB >> 34665298 |
Thomas L Diepgen1, Gitte Jacobsen2,3, Kurt Rasmussen4, Anne Bregnhøj5, Marléne Isaksson6, Ole Carstensen4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Irritant contact dermatitis (ICD) is a major cause of occupational disease. The aim was to review the relation between exposure to occupational irritants and ICD and the prognosis of ICD.Entities:
Keywords: Hand eczema; Irritant contact dermatitis; Occupational contact dermatitis; Prognosis; Skin exposure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34665298 PMCID: PMC8755674 DOI: 10.1007/s00420-021-01781-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Arch Occup Environ Health ISSN: 0340-0131 Impact factor: 3.015
Fig. 1Flowchart of the inclusion of studies
Occupational exposure, outcome based on clinical examinations, and patch tests
| Author | Study design and population | Exposure and exposure assessment | Outcome diagnostic criteria | Covariates accounted for | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wet work occupations | |||||
| Healthcare workers | |||||
Held et al. ( Denmark | Prospective 10- week non-RCT intervention study of nurse student from 2 schools Intervention/controls: Baseline: F-up: 54/40 | Self-rep. daily exp: wet work, gloves, moisturizers, disinfectants Intervention: educational program | HE/skin irritation, graded mild (1–5 points), moderate/severe (> 5 points) Measurements of TEWL during f-up | Age, gender, AD, previous HE, domestic exp. nickel allergy | CIP HE/skin irritation: intervention vs controls 39%/48% Adj. OR: AD and baseline skin problems: |
Stingeni et al. ( Italy | CS study of hospital empl. Questionnaires, clinical exam. incl. patch and prick skin tests | Self-rep. exp: disinfectants, latex gloves & cleaning products Proxy of exp. contrast. department /job category | HE: objective signs, history and results of skin test ACD: relevant pos. patch test ICD: correlation of exp. to irritants and onset of HE | Age, gender, atopy | PP HE 28.1%; OCD 21.2%, ICD 20.1%, ACD 1.1% PR* OCD: Dep. internal medicine vs: radiological PR* OICD: cleaners vs doctors |
| Hairdressers | |||||
Guo et al. ( Taiwan | CS study hairdressing shops. Interviews and clinical exam. incl. patch test | Self- rep: Duration hr/week total of work tasks apprentices/stylists, incl. shampooing: 15.1/0.01; waving: 12.6/6.9; drying: 7.6/21.9; cutting: 0/8.9 Glove wearing at work tasks | HE, exam. + photographs HE classified dry irritant/MP type and eczema of the fingers 3 scale severity of HE | Age, gender, atopy, sensitization allergens/nickel: 44%/28% | Apprentices vs stylists, HE: PP, PR*: All HE 98.3% vs 56.6%, PR* Moderate/severe HE: 69.3% vs 27.8%, PR* Dry irritant type:69.4% vs 36.1%, Eczema fingers: 22.6% vs 16.7%, all with positive patch tests |
| Food-related industry | |||||
Teo et al. ( Singapore | CS study of kitchen and service worker at 26: restaurants Questionnaire, clinical exam, patch/prick test | Self-rep. handwashing freq, exp. to detergents, chemicals, raw food Hand wash > 20 times/day: 36% | OICD: rash after start of job Patch test of subgroup with OCD and suspected ACD CU: prick test | Age, gender, atopy, ethnicity, compliance with glove use | 12 months PP OICD 10% Adj. PR: Handwashing > 20 times/day: Contact with squid: Atopy: |
Tacke et al. ( Germany | Register study of recognized cases of OSD in 3 yrs Clinical exam. incl. patch test Bakers:107 (5,611 population) Confectioners: 31 (3,691) Cooks: 79 (23,252) | Occupation proxy of exposure Median self-rep exp. time months: Bakers 26, confectioner 26, cooks 43 | OISD (OICD) definition: severe or relapsing dermatosis necessitating stop of all occupational activities related to specific exposures | Age, gender atopy | OICD % of cases: 70% in bakers, 87% in confectioners and 84% in cooks OICD RR* Baker vs cook: |
Kavli and Moseng ( Norway | CS study at 2 fish factories Workers: fish-stick Questionnaire and clinical exam | Fish-stick workers: packing of frozen fish-blocks, flour-dust, cardboard boxes, gloves Filet workers: cutting of fish fillets without use of gloves | ICD ACD and CU: Patch test and prick test | Age, gender, atopy | PP ICD fish-stick workers/fillet workers 5.3% ( PP CU fish-stick workers/fillet workers: 7.4%/2.4% ACD: None occupational |
| Gloves | |||||
Stingeni et al. ( Italy Study subpopulation of Stingeni et al. ( | CS study of hospital employ. Questionnaires, interviews, clinical exam. incl skin tests when glove reaction/atopy | Latex gloves Department and job proxy of exp. (nurse, doctor, cleaners, laboratory workers, radiology assistant) | ICD: HE, neg. patch and prick test for relevant allergens, positive use test latex gloves | Age, gender, atopy | PP HE 13.6%; ICD 13%: males 7.2%, females 17.9% ICD PR*: cleaners vs nurses HE PR* departments: internal vs lab: |
| Metalworking fluids and oils | |||||
de Boer et al. ( The Netherlands | CS study metalworkers at 10 factories, exp. MWF. Interviews, clinical exam. Incl, patch test when present/past eczema | MWF (W-MWF Factory visits: handling of MWF, extensive individual exp. Frequent exp: > once per hr (78%) Infrequent exp: < once per hr | Clinical Dermatitis: Minor (slight erythema, chapping), Major (eczema or widespread erythema, induration) ICD: Dermatitis + neg. patch tests | Atopy, allergy (2.8% ACD excluded analysis) | PP: CD 14%, ICD 11%, irritant skin changes 58% Irritant skin changes PR* Frequent vs infrequent W-MWF: Frequent W- MWF vs frequent O-MWF: |
Jee et al. ( Taiwan | CS study of female workers of Ball Bearing factory vs zipper-manufacturing company Clinical exam. Incl. patch test | Kerosene (for degreasing) Semi-quantitative, expert judgement: heavy exp: 5 h a day/ light exp. < 5 h a day | Clinical Dermatoses i) Erythema ii) Eczema iii) Defatting dermatitis | Age, gender | Dermatoses/Eczema exp. vs controls 84%/15% vs < 1% (p < 0.001) Dermatoses/eczema, high vs low exp.: PR* 1.17 (0.97–1.41) / 1.56 (0.54–4.47) |
Fischer and Rystedt ( Sweden | CS study of workers at a hard-metal factory. Interview, clinical exam. incl. patch tests | Present and previous work with grinding vs other work activities Exp. assessment from observed work task | Present or previous HE/Dermatitis or irritant reactions | Age, gender, atopy, contact sensitivity to relevant allergens | Current or previous skin reactions: grinders vs other groups, PR*: HE: 0.88* (0.64–1.20) Irritant reactions: Current or previous skin reactions: wet oil grinding vs dry grinders & others, PR*: HE: Irritant reactions: |
| Fibres | |||||
Kiec-Swierczynska and Wojtczak ( Poland | CS study at 6 factories manufacturing ceramic fibers Ref: Metal press operators, dyers or seamstresses in same area | 127 individual dust measurements. Range total dust 0.2–33.9 mg/m3 Patch test % fibers > 3 μm Thermowool:: no fibers L-2 (polish): 6.3% L-3 (polish): 11.1% | ICD diagnosed clinical Acute ICD: transient Chronic ICD: Persistent erythema, telangiectasias on face neck, trunk Patch test of relevant allergens and irritative response to ceramic fibers | Age, gender | ICD: 48.2%, vs 7%, PR* Acute ICD: 30.5% vs 0%, RD* 0.31* (0.25–0.37) Chronic ICD: 26.1% vs 7%, PR* Patch test confirmed irritative activity of fibers in 19.5% Irritantancy correlated to of fibers > 3 μm All exp. reported strong itching of skin |
Diagnoses: ACD Allergic contact dermatitis, AD Atopic dermatitis, CD Contact dermatitis, CU Contact urticaria, HE Hand eczema, ICD Irritant contact dermatitis, OCD Occupational contact dermatitis, OICD Irritant occupational contact dermatitis, OSD Occupational skin disease. Exposures and confounders: CS carbon disulphide, HSO sulfuric acid, exp exposure, HCW Healthcare workers, exp exposure, MWF Metal working fluids; W-MWF water-based MWF, O-MWF oil-based MWF, TDI toluene diisocyante. Study characteristics: adj adjusted, ass association, CC case–control, CIP Cumulative incidence proportion, CS cross-sectional, diff differences, DRR dose–response relation, exam examination, f-up follow-up; , freq frequency, hr hour(s) , incl included, neg negative, NR not reported, NS non-significant, OR odds ratio, PP Prevalence proportion, PR Prevalence ratio, S significant, RR risk ratio, IRR incidence rate ratio, RD risk difference, self-rep self-reported, TEWL Transepidermal water loss, vs versus, yr year
*Calculated from data provided in article.
Occupational exposure, outcome based on clinical examinations, but without patch tests
| Author | Study design and population | Exposure and exposure assessment | Outcome diagnostic criteria | Covariates accounted for | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wet work occupations | |||||
| Healthcare workers | |||||
Callahan et al. ( USA | 6-month f-up study of HCW, hand wash ≥ 8 times/day. Questionnaire and patch test with irritants Clinical exam.—1 month interval | Self-rep baseline daily freq. of handwashing, mean (SD): 12 (5.7) Season (cold and warm) | ICD hands clinical diagnosis ICD classified active dermatitis/eczema & minor dermatitis | Age, gender, atopy, ethnicity, indoor humidity, use of gloves and sanitizers | CIP ICD 51% IRR ICD daily freq. of handwashing: ≥ 10 vs < 10: continuous variable: IRR Season (cold vs warm): |
| Food-related industry | |||||
Bauer et al. ( Germany | 1 yr cohort study of apprentices at bakeries Interview and clinical exam 2–4 weeks after start of training at 1 yr. | Self-rep freq. hr/day work tasks (< 1, 1–4, > 4) Work tasks incl. cleaning, wet dough, fruit handling | HE defined as mild (erythema, scaling), moderate (infiltration and papules), severe (vesicles and fissures) | Age, gender, atopy, previous HE, leisure activities | PP OCD / ICD hands: 2–4 weeks: 17.5% /NR, ½ yr: 29%/25.3%, 1 yr: 27%/19% HE, exp. OR Handwashing > 20/day: at 1 yr: 2.95 (0.85–10) Cleaning > 1 h: at 1 yr: |
Bauer et al. ( Germany F-up Bauer et al. ( | 3 yrs cohort study of Bauer et al. ( 63 (69%) at all 4 exam. after start of training | As Bauer et al. ( | As Bauer et al. ( | As Bauer et al. ( | PP 3-year OCD hands 27.5%, 21.7% ICD. Period P HE study: 41.3% Adj. analysis at 3-year, OR Wet work + Hand washing > 20 times/day: |
| Hairdressers | |||||
Uter et al. ( Germany | 3-yr cohort study of hairdressing apprentices Ref: office workers 1-yr f-up: 1717/40 3-yr f-up: 1134/68 | Self-rep daily time of wet work and of glove wearing High wet load: shampooing and permanent waving without gloves | Operational definitions for skin changes,classified Mild Moderate Severe | Atopy score, age, gender, atopy, past HE | PP any skin changes/HE %: 35.4/12.9 at baseline, 47.5/23.5 at 1 yr. f-up, 55.1/23.9 at 3 yr f-up Adj. analyses skin changes at 3 yr f-up, OR: Wet work /glove wearing hr/day < 2 h/ < 2 h: 1.4 (0.5–4.3), ≥ 2 h/ ≥ 2 h: ≥ 2 h/ < 2 h: Handwashing > 10/day: 1.1 (0.9–1.4) |
| Wet work various industries | |||||
Vermeulen et al. ( The Nederlands | CS study at nine rubber-manufacturing companies Interview and clinical exam | Self-rep. freq. of handwashing, surfactants (mild soap or industrial) Use of gloves by observation Domestic exposure evaluated by experts for irritancy | Major dermatitis: erythema, papules, vesicles and fissures Minor dermatitis: erythema, chapping and scaling of the skin IgE for latex allergy | Age, gender, atopy, domestic skin exp. irritants | OR adj. Handwashing/day: 5– 9: 0.53 (0.11–2.66)/ > 10: 1.18 (0.30–4.62)/2.27 (0.92–5.56) Industrial surfactant use: 0.64 (0.19–2.21)/1.92 (0.91–4.02) Glove use: 0.61 (0.18–2.11)/0.58 (0.27–1.23) |
| Gloves | |||||
Weistenhofer et al. ( Germany | CS study in semiconductor manufacture company Interview and clinical exam Exp: clean-room workers Ref: admin personal | Nitrile gloves ≥ 2 h/day (whole work shift) Duration of exp: < 1, 1–2, 2–7.5, > 7.5 yrs | HE: clinical diagnosis using HEROS TWEL | Age, gender, atopy, smoking, use of barrier creams, skin care | Pos. ass. HEROS and duration of glove wearing, but no diff. between highest exp. and controls Adj. analyses: NS differences TEWL exp. vs controls: transient increased (30 min) |
Weistenhofer et al. ( Germany | CS study, same population as Weistenhofer et al. ( Interview and clinical exam Exp/ref: | Same exposure measurements as 2015 study 60% exposed < 7.5 yrs | As Weistenhofer et al. ( | As Weistenhofer et al. ( | Self-rep. skin problems at present workplace: 14% workers, 4% controls HEROS values: NS differences TEWL adj: increase TEWL ass. duration (yr) of employment in clean room |
| Metalworking/fluids and oils | |||||
Berndt et al. ( Switzerland | 2.5-yr. cohort study metalworker trainees Clinical exam. every 6-months Nested CC of 47 cases | O-MWF, W-MWF, mechanical exp. metal dust, cleaning agents Duration individual exp. Based on expert judgement of job type and self-rep diary Schooldays without exp | Incident mild HE Case definition: erythema and scaling, vesicles, excoriations, papules or exudation | Age, gender, atopy, smoking, domestic exp | CIP 2.5 yr.: 23%. ( OR multivariate analysis: Whole period/0.5 yr. prior to diagnosis: School days/week ≤ 1.5: Mechanical work (hr/day): 1.35 (0.98–1.86) trend Cleaners with solvent (hr/day:—/1.44 (0.99–2.08) trend |
Goh and Gan ( Singapore | 6-month cohort study of machinist at ball-bearing factory and paramedic controls | O-MWF Qualitative exp. assessment of machinist with daily exp to cutting fluids | Point prevalence of ICD at 3 week intervals Clinical exam Mild: < 25% of hand, Moderate: > 25% of hand | Age, gender, atopy | PP ICD mainly mild at f-up week: 0: 0%, 3: 39%, 6: 78%, 9–30: ~50%. PP controls all 0 |
| Mechanics—car industry | |||||
Apfelbacher et al. ( Germany | Nested CC studies of irritant HE cases from 13- yr. f-up in car manufacture industry Controls: non-cases from same pop. Questionnaire, interview, clinical exam Cases/controls: | Self-rep. exp: Wet work > 2 h/day Dry skin soiling > 3 h/day W-MWF, O-MWF, solvents, epoxide, metal dust, cleaning/abrasive pastes | ICD by dermatologist HE when erythema and vesicles, scaling, papules, erosions/fissures, or lichenification | Age, gender, atopy, previous eczema, domestic exp | PP exp. ICD % / Controls %: Office job: 15.8% / 32.5%, Wet work ≥ 2 h/day: 49.1% /31.7%, Adj. analysis exp. ICD vs controls, OR: Office job: 0.61 (0.24–1.54) Wet work ≥ 2 h: 1.62 (0.78–3.37) |
| Various industries/exposures | |||||
Chou et al. ( Taiwan, China | CS study of workers at a rayon factory Exp: Ref: 29 packing, administration same company | Expert scoring by field study Exp. dichotomized ± CS2: (undiluted) H2SO4 (20%) Combined: CS2 solution (2.2 g/l) & 10% H2SO4 | HE Clinical diagnosed by dermatologist. HE: erythema, papules vesicles and fissures. | Age, gender handwashing habit & glove use given for 37 workers | PR HE: exp. 50–64%, ref. 3.4% HE Exp. vs ref. OR: CS2: H2SO4: Combined: |
Bold values indicate significant findings
Abbreviations: see footnote to Table 1
Occupational exposures and self-reported outcome
| Author | Study design and population | Exposure and exposure assessment | Outcome diagnostic criteria | Covariates accounted for | Results PR/RR/OR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wet work occupations | |||||
| Cleaners | |||||
Douwes et al. ( New Zealand | CS of cleaners and reference workers (retail and bus driving) | Job status at recruitment Self-rep. exp Self-rep. duration of daily exp. to water, cleaning products without gloves Use of gloves and skin care | HE or urticaria NOSQ-2002 questionnaire interview Prick test Measurement of TEWL | Age, gender, ethnicity, smoking, atopy Childhood eczema | Cleaners vs references: HE: 1.9 (1.1–3.2) HE due to glove use: 3.9 (2.2–6.7) Increased TEWL HE adj. analysis: Hours of hands exposed to water without gloves vs never, OR: < ½: No ass.to hand-washing, cleaning products or use of gloves |
Mirabelli et al. ( Spain | CS study of cleaners and non-cleaners at 37 cleaning companies. Nested CC on subpopulation | Self-rep: Freq. of use of various cleaning products Selected exp. last 12 months: Use of hydrochloric acid: 36% | HE last 12 months Definition HE: ≥ 1 of 5 possible self-rep skin symptoms Validation symptom-based HE: clinical exam. nested CC (70): sensitivity 0.82, specificity 0.62, pos. pred. 0.41, neg. pred. 0.92 | Age, gender, previous eczema and allergy, frequent glove use, cleaning at home | Adj. PR Exp. vs C: Use of hydrochloric acid Use of dust mop products Also S for freq. use of several cleaning products |
Nielsen ( Denmark | CS study of female cleaners at 271 public institutions | Self-rep: Wet work hrs per week baseline: < 1:19%; 1–10:25%;11–20:33%; 21–30:16%; 31–40: 6%, > 40:1% Use of gloves | 12-month prevalence of self-rep skin symptoms incl: red and rough skin; cracks, itching, vesicles No clinical validation | Age, gender, wet work at home Atopy not accounted for | Hr wet work and vesicles, OR: 1–10:1.4; 11–20:1.6; 21–30: Use of protective gloves and vesicles, OR Seldom: 1; sometimes |
| Healthcare workers | |||||
Hamnerius et al. ( Sweden | CS study 12.228 hospital employees, 9051 HCW (nurses, assistant nurses and physicians) | Self-rep. % exp, times a day: Handwashing with soap 30% > 20 times Alcoholic Hand disinfectants: 45% > 50 times Gloves: 40% > 20 times Hours a day: Gloves, 54% > 2 h | HE 1-yr and life time prevalence | Age, gender, AD wet work at home life style, | 1 yr. prevalence HE: 21% Life time prevalence HE: 35% Adj. OR: Times/day hand wash with soap: 11–20: Hours of daily glove use: 1–3 h/ day: 1.2 (0.97–1.5) > 3 h/day: |
Visser et al. ( The Netherlands | 1–3 yrs. prospective cohort study of apprentice nurses from 15 vocational schools 721 (50% baseline), 533 (73%), f-up 1,2 or 3 yrs., 445 without previous HE | Diaries. Median freq./day: Handwashing: 8 Alcoholic hand disinfection: 5 Gloves: 4 Other soap/detergents: 4 Other disinfectants: 2 | HE: self-rep. symptoms > 3 days No clinical validation | Age, gender, Higher proportion of atopics among participants than non-participants No adjust AD | IR HE/100 person-yr in traineeship 36.7 first vs 13.7 s/third Wet work activities, adj. OR: Handwashing ≥ 8 times/day: Other Soap exp. ≥ 4 times/day: 1.5 (0.97–2.30) Disinfectants (non-alcoholic) ≥ 2 times a day: 1.1 (0.69–1.79) |
Visser et al. ( The Netherlands | As (Visser et al. 626 DNA samples, 596 genotyped for four filaggrin gene mutations | As (Visser et al. Self-rep. work in a side job (i.e., healthcare, catering) | HE: as (Visser et al. | Atopy, FLG-mutations, freq. handwashing at home | Adj. analysis HE, OR: Handwashing ≥ 8 times/day: Side job wet work > 8 h./week: |
Lee et al. ( Korea | CS study among nurses Questionnaire. Patch testing on subpopulation | Self-rep. daily freq handwashing, gloves and hand moisturizer Gloves min per use, 21% > 5 min | HE: last 12 months Symptom-based HE ACD: relevant pos. patch tests in 43 (61.4%) of subgroup of 70 (43%) of workers with HE | Age, gender, atopy, history of rhinitis/asthma. hours of housework | HE: Adj. OR’s: Handwashing times/day: 10–19: 1.31 (0.71–2.36); 20–29: Glove wearing min per use 1–5: 1.6 (0.96–2.65); > 5: Use of moisturizer times a day Significant prevention |
Ibler et al. ( Denmark | CS study of HCW (physicians, nurses, nursing assistants and clinical assistants) | Self-rep. exp: Handwashing, hand disinfectants, water exp, gloves, detergents | HE: last 12 months NOSQ-2002 questionnaire | Age, gender, domestic exp | 21% HE last 12 months HE freq hand washes/day vs no hand wash, OR* 1–5: No ass.to hand disinfectants, duration of daily water exp., detergents or glove exp |
Lan et al. ( Taiwan | Study 1 CS study of nurses from university hospital | Work experience, 32% > 10 yrs Work section: outpatient clinic, ward, special care unit | HE based on diagnostic algorithm of symptoms Atopic eczema during the past year | Age, gender, atopy, housework | PP HE: Yrs. work experience: < 5: 18.7%, 1; 5–10: 20.3%, 1.03 (0.71–1.50); > 10: 27.3%, Adj. OR Work section NS |
Study 2 Observational study among 140 non-atopic nurses with > 1 yr. experience participating in study 1 | Observations during 4 h morning shift, times per day and daily duration of Handwashing Alcohol hand rub Gloves: | As above | As above | Adj. OR HE: Handwashing > 6 times: Alcohol rub > 9 times: 0.62 (0.26–1.50) Gloves > 2 times: 0.51 (0.17–1.48) Daily duration of exp. NS | |
Flyvholm et al. ( Denmark | CS study of hospital employees. Questionnaire | Self-rep: Jobs Daily hand-washing, > 20 times: 44% Daily or weekly use of hand disinfectants 54.3% Use of gloves: 46.8% | HE last 12 months NOSQ-2002 questionnaire | Age, gender, AD, rhinitis, asthma HE more frequent among atopic, females, < 40 yrs | PP HE in job groups varied 7.9%–32.1%, PR* HE: Handwashing > 20 times daily: 1 Hand Disinfectants daily/weekly: 1.07* (0.85–1.34); Use of gloves |
| Hairdressers | |||||
Jung et al. ( Korea | CS study of random sample hairdressers. Questionnaire | Self-rep. exposure: Training status Washing, cutting, permanent wave or dying Hairdressing chemicals Personal protective equipment (gloves, mask) | HE: self-rep. symptoms > 3 weeks | Age, gender, smoking, alcohol, perceived health, personal protective equipment | Adj. OR HE: Training status vs master: designer 1.22 NS, staff Washing vs cutting: Exp. to chemicals 0.89 (0.53–1.49) |
| Wet work various industries | |||||
Mortz et al. ( Denmark | Cohort study of young adults, age 28–30 yr from the general population (15 yr. after baseline study) Questionnaire Clinical exam. | Self-rep. exp. wet work Handwashing > 20/day: 10.7% Use of occlusive gloves Domestic exp | HE (current, 1 yr, lifetime) NOSQ-2002 questionnaire Subgroup clinical HE Patch test incl | Age, gender, atopy, smoking, domestic exp | Current HE 7.1%, 1 yr PP. 14.3%. Clinical HE 6.4% (76% ICD, 3% ACD) HE self-rep 1 yr: Handwashing > 20 vs 0–5 times/day, OR*: Adj. analyses (OR) current wet work |
Lazarov et al. ( Israel | CS study among 400 hydrotherapist Interview and questionnaire | Cumulative work hrs in pools. 20% > 10,000 h 59% present hydrotherapist | Self-rep symptoms: extremities, face and trunk No clinical validation | Age, gender AD, smoking Pre-existing skin disease (11.9%), | PP self-rep. skin disease 45% ( Adj. analysis, OR ≥ 10,000 h cumulative exp: |
| Metalworking/fluids and oils | |||||
Mirabelli et al. ( 10 European Countries | Pooled data from two multicenter population-based f-up studies Baseline surveys: 1991 F-up: 1998/2002 | Self-rep. days of weekly exp Metalwork W-MWF, O-MWF Organic solvents/degreasing agents | Self-rep rash during last 12 months No distinction between irritant and allergic reactions | Age, gender, atopy, history of eczema or skin allergy at baseline | 12-month PP 10% Days of weekly exp. 1–3; 4–7. Ref < 1 day. Adj. PR Hard Metal: O– MWF: 0.89 (0.44–1.81), Organic solvents: |
| Construction/cement | |||||
Avnstorp ( Denmark | 6-yr cohort study construction workers exp. to cement, not sensitized to chromate | Self-rep. freq. work processes involving cement exp Use of gloves, creams and handwashing | ICD: Self-rep. episodes of HE previously/past/current lasting at least 2 weeks Neg patch test to chromate | Allergy chromate | CIP self-rep. HE 16.4% NS ass. HE and concrete pouring and other work task with cement exp |
Petersen and Sabroe ( Denmark | CS study of construction workers exp. to mineral wool (MMMF) Questionnaire | Self-rep. MMMF exp. hr per month past yr | Self-rep eczema when skin eruption/rash > once per week Self-rep. stinging or itching | Age, gender, smoking, organic solvents | 2/3 of highest exp. had symptoms from skin OR symptom each of 6 exp. categories: Itching skin: Eczema: |
Daftarian et al. ( USA | CS study at a foam manufacturing facility exp. to toluene diisocyanate (TDI) and controls of non-production workers | TDI and other chemicals (waxes and adhesives) TDI measurements foam production: Individual measurements in breathing zone, area samples, ± dermal exp | Irritant reaction based on self-rep. dermal symptoms, no specific antibodies (IgE and IgG) and neg patch test to TDI | Age, gender, sensibilisation environmental allergens (IgE) | Production vs non-production workers: PR: 2.66 (1.14–16.32) No type 1 or type 4 allergy to TDI Work-related dermal symptoms was irritant reaction to TDI |
Bold values indicate significant findings
Abbreviations: see footnote Table 1
Prognosis of ICD
| Author | Study design and population | Exposure and occupational consequences | Prognostic outcome diagnostic criteria | Covariates accounted for | Results PR/RR/OR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Caroe et al. ( Denmark | Cohort study of pt. with recognized OCD 4–5 yr. after diagnosis OCD ICD ICD wet work: | ICD due to wet work: 43% HCW Job change during follow-up of ICD: Same profession: 50% Changed profession: 31% Not working: 18% Duration of wet hands and glove use, freq of handwashing at f-up | Healing during 12 months and improvement in severity Severity scale 0–10, of current OCD Effect of job change on quality of life | Age, gender, AD Sub-study: severity ICD at baseline | a) Changed vs same prof: 1.60 (0.99–2.61) / b) Not working vs same prof: a) b) |
Vester et al. ( Denmark | Cohort study among food-related jobs 0.3–10 yr Protein CD: 28% (50) ICD: 63.5% (113) ACD, CU, multiple: 8.5% (15) | Work-related consequences Job change due to skin problems ICD ~ others: 43% Sick leave > 3 weeks: ICD ~ others:10% | Improvement in subgroups of OCD of hands At baseline clinical diagnoses of subgroups of HE, incl. ICD | Age, gender, AD | 84% |
Malkonen et al. ( Finland | Cohort study of patients diagnosed with OSD incl. ICD. Questionnaire OSD 1048 (89%) Subgroup with ICD: 363 | ICD and changed work tasks: 19% job/occupation: 12% loss of job: 13% ICD, no work changes: 47% | Continuation or healing of ICD, diagnosed clinically at baseline, incl. patch and prick test | Age, gender, atopy, contact allergies, occupation | ACD ref. ICD: 1.0 No work changes: Food related occupation Skin atopy: 1.4 NS Respiratory atopy: Age > 45 yr: |
Malkonen et al. ( Finland | Study population as Malkonen et al. ( ACD: ICD: | ICD, work changes work tasks or job: 55% occupation: 35% loss of job: 18% no work changes: 8% | Self-rep healing of baseline OCD | Age, gender, skin atopy, work-related contact allergy | Duration of OCD prior to diagnosis (ref < 1 yr) 1–2 yr: No change of occupation Skin atopy: Respiratory atopy: |
Cvetkovski et al. ( Denmark | Cohort study pt. with recognized OCD—1 yr. f-up ICD: 61% ICD + ACD or CU: 15% | Job change at f-up: 48% Disease duration Socioeconomic status | Aggravation, persistence or improvement of self-rep. severity of HE: visual analog scale At baseline, clinical scoring of severity by dermatologist | Age, gender, atopy, occupation | I AD: Age > 25, worse prognosis No ass. diagnostic group Risk of job loss severe OCD RR |
Jungbauer et al. ( The Netherlands | Cohort study of patients diagnosed with ICD by dermatologist F-up 5 yr N = 124 (72%) | Wet work exp. at f-up Low: 48%, Medium: 9% High: 42% Self-rep. preventive measures | Self-rep. disease severity Freq. of visiting dermatologist | Age, gender No ACD or AD at baseline | Severity scores 5 yr. after diagnosis: medium 50%, high in 32% No significant association between severity of HE and parameters for exp, gender or occupation |
Adisesh et al. ( UK | Cohort study of consequences of reported OCD. Questionnaire and f-up after ½ and 1 yr N = 510 (71%) 1/3: ICD, 1/3 ACD, 1/3 mixed | Exp. duration < ½ year. 17% ½-3 yr. 22% 3–10 yr. 27% > 10 yr. 18% Unknown: 17% | Time off work Improved clinical condition during f-up OCD diagnosed clinically Patch test of 61% | Age, gender, atopy | Time off work, OR ACD vs ICD/mixed: Age/per 10 yr: Notified OCD: Mean duration of exp. non-improved vs improved Non-atopic: 9.1 yr. vs 5.3 yr. (p = 0.03) |
Shah et al. ( UK | Cohort study of self-rep. prognosis of OCD in metalworkers 1–5 yr. after clinical diagnosis OHE: 51 (80%) ICD: 31% (16), ACD: 53% (27), AD 16% (8) | Exp. cutting oil f-up: 43% continuous exp 55% of non-exposed/ unemployed or retired | Self-rep. continuous symptoms of HE Baseline clinical diagnoses: ACD: pos. patch test ICD: Irritant factors evaluated as important | AD incl. as subgroup of OHE | Continuous exp. vs non-exposed |
Rosen and Freeman ( Australia | Cohort study of patients with OCD F-up: 1–5 year OCD: 334 (59%) ICD: 58% (195) ACD: 42% (139) | Self-rep. changes Changed industry: 37% (n = 122) Hairdressers: 47% Food industry: 39% Changed work tasks: 24% | Self-rep. status of healing and improvement i 5 outcome categories Baseline clinical diagnosis incl. patch test | Atopy | Improvement rate 70% Change of occupation vs same industry Change of work tasks vs same work tasks: |
Chia ( Singapore | Cohort study of patients with OCD. F-up 1 yr N = 112 (87%) ACD 28% (n = 31) ICD 73% (n = 81) | Prognostic factors: ICD duration exp. yrs: < 1: 43%,1- < 3: 31%; ≥ 3: 26% Prevention: avoiding exp: Oil/coolants: 46% (11) Solvents/flux: 52% (12) | Healing or persistence of OCE, Clinical assessed in 41%, interview- based in 59% Baseline clinical diagnoses, incl. patch test | Age, gender, ethnicity, ACD | OCD No difference between ACD and ICD ICD, in stratified analyses: Prognosis did not depend on age, sex, ethnicity, duration of exp or avoidance of exp |
Lindemayr ( Austria La. German | Cohort study of hairdressers with OCD Observations: 0.3–2 yr OCD N = 215 (87%) ACD 71% (n = 154) ICD/non-ACD 29% (n = 61) | Change of occupation: 62% Detailed listing of types of chemicals used at baseline | Healing of OCD, assessed clinically Baseline clinical diagnosis incl. patch test | Gender, atopy | ACD: 32% |
Keczkes et al. ( UK | Cohort study of patients with ICD. F-up 1–16 year N = 188 (41%) | Change of occupation: 49% 24% were housewives/part-time cleaners | Self-rep. healing or active ICD ICD diagnosed clinically at baseline, all neg. patch tests | Exclusion of patients with history of AD or psoriasis | PP (95% CI*): PP 33% vs 30%, PR* 1.10 (0.7–1.7) |
Bold values indicate significant findings
Abbreviations: see footnote to Table 1