Prevalence of, and work-related risk factors for, hand eczema in a Norwegian general population (The HUNT Study)

Contact Dermatitis. 2017 Oct;77(4):214-223. doi: 10.1111/cod.12800. Epub 2017 Apr 27.

Abstract

Background: Chemical exposures at work and at home may cause hand eczema. However, this has been scarcely described for Norway.

Objectives: To investigate the prevalence of, and occupational risk factors for, hand eczema in Norway.

Methods: Among 50 805 respondents (aged ≥20 years) to the third Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT3), 5757 persons reported ever having hand eczema, and 4206 answered a hand eczema questionnaire.

Results: The lifetime prevalences of hand eczema were 8.4% in men and 13.8% in women (p < 0.001), with onset at age ≤10 years in 24% (men) and 20% (women), and onset at age ≥30 years in 37% (men) and 25% (women) (p < 0.001). Work-related hand eczema affected 4.8% of the population, and was most frequently associated with health/social work (29%) and occupational cleaning (20%) in women, and with farming (26%) and industrial occupations (27%) in men. Cleaning detergents (75%) and other chemicals (36%) were the most common exacerbating factors.

Conclusions: The prevalence of hand eczema was 11.3%, and that of work-related hand eczema was 4.8%. Hand eczema was more common in women than in men, but with a later onset in men. Cleaning detergents were the most common aggravating factors. A large proportion of the Nord-Trøndelag population is employed in farming, providing the possibility to identify farming as an important risk factor for hand eczema.

Keywords: HUNT; atopic dermatitis; epidemiology; hand eczema; occupational.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Dermatitis, Allergic Contact / etiology
  • Dermatitis, Contact / etiology
  • Dermatitis, Occupational / etiology*
  • Eczema / epidemiology
  • Female
  • Hand Dermatoses / etiology
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Norway
  • Prevalence
  • Risk Factors