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Influence of tumour necrosis factor‐ α polymorphism −308 and atopy on irritant contact dermatitis in healthcare workers *
Author(s) -
Davis Jennifer A.,
Visscher Marty O.,
Randall Wickett R.,
Hoath Steven B.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
contact dermatitis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1600-0536
pISSN - 0105-1873
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0536.2010.01778.x
Subject(s) - irritant contact dermatitis , erythema , irritation , medicine , hand eczema , dermatology , atopy , lotion , contact dermatitis , allergy , sensitive skin , atopic dermatitis , immunology , pharmacology
Background. Chronic irritant hand dermatitis is an issue for healthcare workers and may negatively impact infection control. Objectives. We examined the effects of a G to A transition at position −308 on the tumour necrosis factor‐ α (TNF‐ α ) gene on chronically damaged skin of healthcare workers during exposure and recovery from repetitive hand hygiene, after intensive treatment, and on the irritant response in normal skin. Patients/Materials/Methods. In 68 healthcare workers with irritant hand dermatitis, we genotyped TNF‐ α −308 and measured the epidermal response via quantitative digital imaging, erythema, dryness, and barrier integrity. Results. Excess hand erythema decreased with hand hygiene exposure and increased during time off for AA/GA genotypes, but had opposite effects for GG. AA/GA had smaller reductions in dryness with lotion treatment and larger reductions in excess erythema than GG. The atopic diathesis and heightened neurosensory irritation resulting from water and lactic acid significantly influenced the responses. Repeated exposure to water and sodium lauryl sulfate (0.05, 0.1%) produced higher erythema in normal skin for AA/GA than for GG. Conclusions. This study provides evidence that the TNF‐ α polymorphism at −308 and an atopic history impact the severity of irritation and recovery from exposure and response to treatment for common hand skin products in both chronic irritant hand dermatitis and normal skin.