Abstract
Background: Continual surveillance based on patch test results has proved useful for the identification of contact allergy. Objectives: To provide a current view on the spectrum of contact allergy to important sensitizers across Europe. Patients/Methods: Clinical and patch test data of 19 793 patients patch tested in 2005/2006 in the 31 participating departments from 10 European countries (the European Surveillance System on Contact Allergies' (ESSCA) www.essca-dc.org) were descriptively analysed, aggregated to four European regions. Results: Nickel sulfate remains the most common allergen with standardized prevalences ranging from 19.7% (central Europe) to 24.4% (southern Europe). While a number of allergens shows limited variation across the four regions, such as Myroxylon pereirae (5.3-6.8%), cobalt chloride (6.2-8.8%) or thiuram mix (1.7-2.4%), the differences observed with other allergens may hint on underlying differences in exposures, for example: dichromate 2.4% in the UK (west) versus 4.5-5.9% in the remaining EU regions, methylchloroisothiazolinone/ methylisothiazolinone 4.1% in the South versus 2.1-2.7% in the remaining regions. Conclusions: Notwithstanding residual methodological variation (affecting at least some 'difficult' allergens) tackled by ongoing efforts for standardization, a comparative analysis as presented provides (i) a broad overview on contact allergy frequencies and (ii) interesting starting points for further, in-depth investigation. © 2009 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
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Uter, W., Rämsch, C., Aberer, W., Ayala, F., Balato, A., Beliauskiene, A., … Schnuch, A. (2009). The European baseline series in 10 European Countries, 2005/2006 - Results of the European Surveillance System on Contact Allergies (ESSCA). Contact Dermatitis, 61(1), 31–38. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0536.2009.01572.x
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