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2025-05-10T17:13:47
RDF description of Scalp involvement in patients referred for patch testing: retrospective cross-sectional analysis of North American Contact Dermatitis Group data, 1996 to 2016 - http://repository.healthpartners.com/individual/document-rn25410
Retrospective Studies
10.1016/j.jaad.2020.08.046
Skin Diseases
public
document-rn25410
Scalp involvement in patients referred for patch testing: retrospective cross-sectional analysis of North American Contact Dermatitis Group data, 1996 to 2016
30538
18099
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
Head
84
Dermatitis
4
Adverse Effects
2022-02-21T22:48:57.408-06:00
<p>BACKGROUND: Scalp conditions are often multifactorial. OBJECTIVE: To characterize patients with scalp involvement and patch-testing outcomes. METHODS: Retrospective cross-sectional analysis of North American Contact Dermatitis Group data (1996-2016). Study groups included patients with scalp involvement (�3 anatomic sites coded) with or without additional sites. RESULTS: A total of 4.8% of patients (2331/48,753) had scalp identified as 1 of up to 3 affected anatomic sites. Approximately one-third of "scalp-only" individuals had a specific primary diagnosis of allergic contact dermatitis (38.6%), followed by seborrheic dermatitis (17.2%) and irritant contact dermatitis (9.3%). When adjacent anatomic sites were affected, allergic contact dermatitis was more frequently identified as the primary diagnosis (>50%). The top 5 currently clinically relevant allergens in scalp-only patients were p-phenylenediamine, fragrance mix I, nickel sulfate, balsam of Peru, and cinnamic aldehyde. Methylisothiazolinone sensitivity was notable when adjacent anatomic sites were involved. The top 3 specifically identified sources for scalp-only allergens were hair dyes, shampoo/conditioners, and consumer items (eg, hair appliances, glasses). LIMITATIONS: Tertiary referral population. CONCLUSION: Isolated scalp involvement was less likely to be associated with allergic contact dermatitis than when adjacent anatomic sites were involved. Overlap with multiple diagnoses was frequent, including seborrheic dermatitis, irritant dermatitis, other dermatoses, or all 3. p-Phenylenediamine was the most common allergen.<p>