Bauer Andrea, Rönsch Henriette, Elsner Peter, Dittmar Daan, Bennett Cathy, Schuttelaar Marie-Louise A, Lukács Judit, John Swen Malte, Williams Hywel C
Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Technical University Dresden, Fetscherstr. 74, Dresden, Germany, 01307.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Apr 30;4(4):CD004414. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004414.pub3.
Occupational irritant hand dermatitis (OIHD) causes significant functional impairment, disruption of work, and discomfort in the working population. Different preventive measures such as protective gloves, barrier creams and moisturisers can be used, but it is not clear how effective these are. This is an update of a Cochrane review which was previously published in 2010.
To assess the effects of primary preventive interventions and strategies (physical and behavioural) for preventing OIHD in healthy people (who have no hand dermatitis) who work in occupations where the skin is at risk of damage due to contact with water, detergents, chemicals or other irritants, or from wearing gloves.
We updated our searches of the following databases to January 2018: the Cochrane Skin Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLlNE, and Embase. We also searched five trials registers and checked the bibliographies of included studies for further references to relevant trials. We handsearched two sets of conference proceedings.
We included parallel and cross-over randomised controlled trials (RCTs) which examined the effectiveness of barrier creams, moisturisers, gloves, or educational interventions compared to no intervention for the primary prevention of OIHD under field conditions.
We used the standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. The primary outcomes were signs and symptoms of OIHD developed during the trials, and the frequency of treatment discontinuation due to adverse effects.
We included nine RCTs involving 2888 participants without occupational irritant hand dermatitis (OIHD) at baseline. Six studies, including 1533 participants, investigated the effects of barrier creams, moisturisers, or both. Three studies, including 1355 participants, assessed the effectiveness of skin protection education on the prevention of OIHD. No studies were eligible that investigated the effects of protective gloves. Among each type of intervention, there was heterogeneity concerning the criteria for assessing signs and symptoms of OIHD, the products, and the occupations. Selection bias, performance bias, and reporting bias were generally unclear across all studies. The risk of detection bias was low in five studies and high in one study. The risk of other biases was low in four studies and high in two studies.The eligible trials involved a variety of participants, including: metal workers exposed to cutting fluids, dye and print factory workers, gut cleaners in swine slaughterhouses, cleaners and kitchen workers, nurse apprentices, hospital employees handling irritants, and hairdressing apprentices. All studies were undertaken at the respective work places. Study duration ranged from four weeks to three years. The participants' ages ranged from 16 to 67 years.Meta-analyses for barrier creams, moisturisers, a combination of both barrier creams and moisturisers, or skin protection education showed imprecise effects favouring the intervention. Twenty-nine per cent of participants who applied barrier creams developed signs of OIHD, compared to 33% of the controls, so the risk may be slightly reduced with this measure (risk ratio (RR) 0.87, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.72 to 1.06; 999 participants; 4 studies; low-quality evidence). However, this risk reduction may not be clinically important. There may be a clinically important protective effect with the use of moisturisers: in the intervention groups, 13% of participants developed symptoms of OIHD compared to 19% of the controls (RR 0.71, 95% CI 0.46 to 1.09; 507 participants; 3 studies; low-quality evidence). Likewise, there may be a clinically important protective effect from using a combination of barrier creams and moisturisers: 8% of participants in the intervention group developed signs of OIHD, compared to 13% of the controls (RR 0.68, 95% CI 0.33 to 1.42; 474 participants; 2 studies; low-quality evidence). We are uncertain whether skin protection education reduces the risk of developing signs of OIHD (RR 0.76, 95% CI 0.54 to 1.08; 1355 participants; 3 studies; very low-quality evidence). Twenty-one per cent of participants who received skin protection education developed signs of OIHD, compared to 28% of the controls.None of the studies addressed the frequency of treatment discontinuation due to adverse effects of the products directly. However, in three studies of barrier creams, the reasons for withdrawal from the studies were unrelated to adverse effects. Likewise, in one study of moisturisers plus barrier creams, and in one study of skin protection education, reasons for dropout were unrelated to adverse effects. The remaining studies (one to two in each comparison) reported dropouts without stating how many of them may have been due to adverse reactions to the interventions. We judged the quality of this evidence as moderate, due to the indirectness of the results. The investigated interventions to prevent OIHD probably cause few or no serious adverse effects.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Moisturisers used alone or in combination with barrier creams may result in a clinically important protective effect, either in the long- or short-term, for the primary prevention of OIHD. Barrier creams alone may have slight protective effect, but this does not appear to be clinically important. The results for all of these comparisons were imprecise, and the low quality of the evidence means that our confidence in the effect estimates is limited. For skin protection education, the results varied substantially across the trials, the effect was imprecise, and the pooled risk reduction was not large enough to be clinically important. The very low quality of the evidence means that we are unsure as to whether skin protection education reduces the risk of developing OIHD. The interventions probably cause few or no serious adverse effects.We conclude that at present there is insufficient evidence to confidently assess the effectiveness of interventions used in the primary prevention of OIHD. This does not necessarily mean that current measures are ineffective. Even though the update of this review included larger studies of reasonable quality, there is still a need for trials which apply standardised measures for the detection of OIHD in order to determine the effectiveness of the different prevention strategies.
职业性刺激性手部皮炎(OIHD)会给劳动人口带来严重的功能障碍、工作中断和不适。可以采用不同的预防措施,如防护手套、隔离霜和保湿剂,但这些措施的效果尚不清楚。这是对2010年发表的一篇Cochrane综述的更新。
评估一级预防干预措施和策略(物理和行为方面)对在因接触水、洗涤剂、化学品或其他刺激物或戴手套而皮肤有受损风险的职业中工作的健康人(无手部皮炎)预防OIHD的效果。
我们将以下数据库的检索更新至2018年1月:Cochrane皮肤专科注册库、CENTRAL、MEDLINE和Embase。我们还检索了五个试验注册库,并检查了纳入研究的参考文献以获取更多相关试验的引用。我们手工检索了两组会议论文集。
我们纳入了平行和交叉随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验在现场条件下比较了隔离霜、保湿剂、手套或教育干预措施与无干预措施对OIHD一级预防的有效性。
我们采用了Cochrane预期的标准方法程序。主要结局是试验期间发生的OIHD的体征和症状,以及因不良反应导致的治疗中断频率。
我们纳入了9项RCT,共2888名基线时无职业性刺激性手部皮炎(OIHD)的参与者。6项研究(共1533名参与者)调查了隔离霜、保湿剂或两者的效果。3项研究(共1355名参与者)评估了皮肤保护教育对预防OIHD的有效性。没有符合条件的研究调查防护手套的效果。在每种干预类型中,关于评估OIHD体征和症状的标准、产品和职业存在异质性。所有研究中选择偏倚、实施偏倚和报告偏倚通常不明确。5项研究中检测偏倚风险低,1项研究中风险高。4项研究中其他偏倚风险低,2项研究中风险高。符合条件的试验涉及多种参与者,包括:接触切削液的金属工人、印染厂工人、猪屠宰场的内脏清理工、清洁工和厨房工人、护士学徒、接触刺激物的医院员工以及美发学徒。所有研究均在各自工作场所进行。研究持续时间从4周到3年不等。参与者年龄在16至67岁之间。对隔离霜、保湿剂、隔离霜和保湿剂联合使用或皮肤保护教育的荟萃分析显示,干预措施的效果不精确,倾向于干预组。使用隔离霜的参与者中有29%出现了OIHD体征,而对照组为33%(风险比(RR)0.87,95%置信区间(CI)0.72至1.06;999名参与者;4项研究;低质量证据)。然而,这种风险降低可能在临床上并不重要。使用保湿剂可能有临床上重要的保护作用:干预组中13%的参与者出现了OIHD症状,而对照组为19%(RR 0.71,95%CI 0.46至1.09;507名参与者;3项研究;低质量证据)。同样,使用隔离霜和保湿剂联合使用可能有临床上重要的保护作用:干预组中8%的参与者出现了OIHD体征,而对照组为13%(RR 0.68,95%CI 0.33至1.42;474名参与者;2项研究;低质量证据)。我们不确定皮肤保护教育是否能降低出现OIHD体征的风险(RR 0.76,95%CI 0.54至1.08;1355名参与者;3项研究;极低质量证据)。接受皮肤保护教育的参与者中有21%出现了OIHD体征,而对照组为28%。没有研究直接涉及因产品不良反应导致的治疗中断频率。然而,在3项关于隔离霜的研究中,退出研究的原因与不良反应无关。同样,在1项关于保湿剂加隔离霜的研究和1项关于皮肤保护教育的研究中,退出原因与不良反应无关。其余研究(每组比较中有1至2项)报告了退出情况,但未说明其中有多少可能是由于对干预措施的不良反应。由于结果的间接性,我们将该证据的质量判断为中等。所研究的预防OIHD的干预措施可能很少或不会引起严重不良反应。
单独使用或与隔离霜联合使用的保湿剂可能对OIHD的一级预防在长期或短期内产生临床上重要的保护作用。单独使用隔离霜可能有轻微保护作用,但这在临床上似乎并不重要。所有这些比较的结果都不精确,证据质量低意味着我们对效应估计值的信心有限。对于皮肤保护教育,各试验结果差异很大,效果不精确,汇总的风险降低幅度不足以在临床上产生重要影响。证据质量极低意味着我们不确定皮肤保护教育是否能降低患OIHD的风险。这些干预措施可能很少或不会引起严重不良反应。我们得出结论,目前没有足够的证据来确定地评估用于OIHD一级预防的干预措施的有效性。这不一定意味着当前措施无效。尽管本次综述的更新纳入了质量合理的更大规模研究,但仍需要采用标准化措施检测OIHD的试验,以确定不同预防策略的有效性。