Abstract
Commercially available patch test kits (standard series and various supplementary series) are the basis of a diagnostic work-up if an allergic contact dermatitis is to be confirmed. However, various investigators have shown that this way of testing is not sufficient. Menné et al. [20] found in a multicenter study that the European Standard Series detects only 37–73% of the responsible allergens in patients with contact dermatitis. The additional and/or separately tested allergens were positive in 5–23%; the authors emphasize the necessity of testing with the products actually used by the patient. In Italy, an analysis of 230 patients referred to a contact clinic because of suspected occupational contact dermatitis showed that the standard series alone detected 69.9% of all cases considered to be of an allergic nature [22]; 26.3% of all allergic cases were positive only to supplementary series. The agents most commonly responsible for allergic contact dermatitis were metals and para-phenylenediamine.
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Frosch, P.J., Geier, J., Uter, W., Goossens, A. (2007). Patch Testing with the Patients’Own Products. In: Dictionary of Contact Allergens. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-74165-7_2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-74165-7_2
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