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Patch testing with glucosides: The North American Contact Dermatitis Group experience, 2009-2018

Authors :
Erin M. Warshaw
Michelle Xiong
Amber R. Atwater
Joel G. DeKoven
Melanie D. Pratt
Howard I. Maibach
James S. Taylor
Donald V. Belsito
Jonathan I. Silverberg
Margo J. Reeder
Kathryn A. Zug
Denis Sasseville
Joseph F. Fowler
Vincent A. DeLeo
Marie-Claude Houle
Cory A. Dunnick
Source :
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 87(5)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Alkyl glucosides are nonionic surfactants that are increasingly used in personal care products.To characterize positive patch test reactions to decyl glucoside (5% petrolatum, tested 2009-2018) and lauryl glucoside (3% petrolatum, tested 2017-2018).Retrospective analysis of patients tested by the North American Contact Dermatitis Group.Of 24,097 patients patch tested to decyl and/or lauryl glucoside, 470 (2.0%) had positive reactions. Compared with glucoside-negative patients, glucoside-positive patients had higher odds of occupational skin disease (13.4% vs 10.1%; P = .0207), history of hay fever (38.5% vs 31.6%; P = .0014), atopic dermatitis (39.0% vs 28.6%; P .0001), and/or asthma (21.8% vs 16.5%; P = .0023). Most glucoside reactions (83.9%) were currently relevant. The most common source was personal care products (63.0%), especially hair products (16.5%) and skin cleansers (15.2%). Of 4933 patients tested to decyl and lauryl glucoside, 134 (2.7%) were positive to 1 or both; 43.4% (43 of 99) of decyl-positive patients were also positive to lauryl glucoside and 55.1% (43/78) of lauryl glucoside patients were also positive to decyl glucoside.The cohort predominantly reflects a referral population, and follow-up after testing was not captured.Glucoside positivity occurred in 2.0% of the tested patients. Reactions were often clinically relevant and linked to personal care products. Cross-reactivity was40%.

Details

ISSN :
10976787
Volume :
87
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eecee24effa32cfdd5725871d7cb2b0a