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Research Articles

Allergic contact dermatitis caused by farnesol: clinical relevance

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Pages 278-287 | Received 29 Jun 2010, Accepted 25 Jul 2010, Published online: 21 Sep 2010
 

Abstract

Context: The fragrance material farnesol is cited as an infrequent but important cause of allergic contact dermatitis (ACD). It is included in the fragrance mix II patch series and requires labeling in the European Union if it is used in a consumer product.

Objective: To review the existing literature to determine the causative role of farnesol in clinical contact allergy.

Materials and methods: Survey of the literature on farnesol studies; predictive and clinical elicitation tests in case reports, reviews, and abstracts.

Results: Predictive animal studies demonstrated in most cases that farnesol was a nonsensitizer. However, 2 local lymph node assays (LLNAs) indicated strong sensitization potential. Predictive human test data indicated a low potential, if any, for sensitization in human tests with farnesol at 10% or 12%. A few clinical reports indicated low-level allergy or questionable reactions to farnesol, with 5% being the most commonly used. There were also reports in which no reactions were seen.

Discussion: Predictive testing on farnesol in animals shows conflicting results depending on the study methodology used. Human predictive patch-test data also had gaps that prevented it from being definitive in pointing to a causative relationship between farnesol and contact dermatitis. The real sensitizing potential of a material can best be determined by evaluating the clinical and epidemiological data so as to help resolve the conflicting animal and human predictive test data.

Conclusions: This literature and scoring exercise showed that predictive and clinical elicitation data do not document a clear causative determination that farnesol is a frequent contact allergen. Detailed clinical relevance and patient studies should clarify the clinical problem farnesol represents.

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