Department of Dermatology and Allergy, National Allergy Research Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital Herlev-Gentofte, Hellerup, Denmark.
Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, The LEO Foundation Skin Immunology Research Center, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Contact Dermatitis. 2024 Jul;91(1):1-10. doi: 10.1111/cod.14549. Epub 2024 Apr 5.
Nickel is the leading cause of contact allergy in Europe, with 14.5% of the adult population being sensitized. Despite regulations limiting nickel release from consumer items, the incidence and prevalence of nickel allergy remain high.
To investigate the clinical and subclinical immune response to low-dose nickel exposure on nickel pre-exposed skin to assess the adequacy of current regulatory limits.
Nickel-allergic and healthy controls were patch tested with nickel twice with a 3-4 weeks interval. The first exposure used the diagnostic concentration of 2000 μg/cm nickel sulphate, and the same skin areas were then re-exposed to 0.2, 0.5, 12.8 and 370 μg/cm nickel sulphate. After 48 h, the patch reactions were examined for clinical signs of eczema, and skin biopsies were collected. The transcriptomic immune profile was analysed with Nanostring nCounter and quantitative polymerase chain reaction.
Two nickel-allergic participants (15%) had clinical reactions to the regulatory limiting doses for nickel (0.2/0.5 μg/cm) following re-exposure. There was immune activation in all skin areas following re-exposure to nickel, predominantly mediated by up-regulation of cytokines and chemokines. In all nickel re-exposed skin areas, 81 genes were up-regulated independent from the clinical response. In skin areas exposed to 0.2 μg/cm, 101 immune-related genes were differentially expressed, even when no clinical response was observed. Healthy controls showed up-regulation of three genes in response to nickel re-exposures without any clinical reactions.
Immune activation can be induced in skin with local memory to nickel upon challenge with nickel doses within the regulatory limits. Our findings suggest that the regulatory limits in the European nickel regulation may not provide sufficient protection for consumers against low-dose exposures.
镍是欧洲接触性过敏的主要原因,有 14.5%的成年人口致敏。尽管有法规限制消费产品释放镍,但镍过敏的发生率和流行率仍然很高。
研究低剂量镍暴露在镍预暴露皮肤上的临床和亚临床免疫反应,以评估当前监管限制的充分性。
镍过敏和健康对照组分别用 2000μg/cm ² 硫酸镍进行两次斑贴试验,间隔 3-4 周。第一次暴露使用诊断浓度 2000μg/cm ² 硫酸镍,然后在同一皮肤区域再次暴露于 0.2、0.5、12.8 和 370μg/cm ² 硫酸镍。48 小时后,检查贴剂反应的湿疹临床体征,并采集皮肤活检。使用 Nanostring nCounter 和定量聚合酶链反应分析转录组免疫谱。
两名镍过敏参与者(15%)在重新暴露于监管限制剂量的镍(0.2/0.5μg/cm ² )后出现临床反应。重新暴露于镍后,所有皮肤区域均出现免疫激活,主要由细胞因子和趋化因子的上调介导。在所有重新暴露于镍的皮肤区域中,有 81 个基因独立于临床反应而上调。在暴露于 0.2μg/cm ² 的皮肤区域中,即使没有临床反应,也有 101 个免疫相关基因表达差异。健康对照组在没有任何临床反应的情况下,对镍的重新暴露,有三个基因上调。
在监管限制范围内,用镍剂量刺激具有局部记忆的皮肤,可诱导免疫激活。我们的研究结果表明,欧洲镍法规中的监管限制可能无法为消费者提供对低剂量暴露的充分保护。