Clinical and experimental studies of octocrylene's allergenic potency
Journal article, 2011

Background. Reports of positive patch test and photopatch test reactions to the chemical ultraviolet filter octocrylene have increased during the last decade. Little is known about the reason for octocrylene's allergenic activity. Objectives. To present and discuss the results of patch tests and photopatch tests with octocrylene, and to investigate the possible cause of its allergenic properties. Methods. Results of patch tests and photopatch tests with octocrylene in patients with adverse skin reactions to sunscreen products and/or ketoprofen were collected. The allergenic potency of octocrylene was investigated in the murine local lymph node assay (LLNA). Chemical reactivity assays were used to mimic octocrylene's interaction with biomolecules. Results. We report 23 cases of positive test reactions to octocrylene (5 patch test and 18 photopatch). Notably, many of these patients also had positive photopatch test reactions to ketoprofen and benzophenone-3. Octocrylene was shown to be a moderate sensitizer in the LLNA, and it reacted with amines such as lysine, but not with thiols such as cysteine. Conclusions. The clinical studies show that octocrylene is both a photocontact allergen and a contact allergen. Octocrylene's ability to cause contact allergy is probably attributable to its reactivity towards lysine. To be able to understand why octocrylene causes photocontact allergy, further studies are needed.

Author

I. Karlsson

University of Gothenburg

Katrien Vanden Broecke

KU Leuven– University Hospital Leuven

Jerker Mårtensson

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Organic Chemistry

An Goossens

KU Leuven– University Hospital Leuven

Anna Börje

University of Gothenburg

Contact Dermatitis

0105-1873 (ISSN) 1600-0536 (eISSN)

Vol. 64 6 343-52

Subject Categories

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1111/j.1600-0536.2011.01899.x

PubMed

21504434

More information

Created

10/8/2017