Title of article :
Allergy and topical irritation associated with transdermal testosterone administration: A comparison of scrotal and nonscrotal transdermal systems
Author/Authors :
William P. Jordan Jr، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
6
From page :
108
To page :
113
Abstract :
image Topical effects are the most common adverse event for the scrotal and nonscrotal transdermal testosterone systems. image The study compared topical irritation rates for scrotal (Testoderm Testosterone Transdermal System; ALZA Corporation, Palo Alto, CA) and nonscrotal (Androderm Testosterone Transdermal System; SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals, Philadelphia, PA) products. image This open-label, crossover study randomized 60 healthy, adult males to 14 days each of two treatments: one 40-cm2 scrotal system delivering approximately 4 mg testosterone over 24 hours, or two 37-cm2 nonscrotal systems worn on the back or upper outer arm, providing approximately 5 mg testosterone over 24 hours. Severity of topical effects was scored at system removal. image Allergic contact dermatitis and spontaneous flaring of prior application sites occurred in 7 (12%) subjects using nonscrotal systems on Day 12; no confirmed cases of allergy to the scrotal system were observed (p< 0.001). For scrotal and nonscrotal systems respectively, moderately intense irritation was noted immediately after system removal in 5% and 32% of subjects (p< 0.001), and in 1% and 7% of systems applied (p< 0.001). image Scrotal systems produced no confirmed contact allergy and less topical irritation than nonscrotal systems. The four subjects with contact allergy to nonscrotal systems used the scrotal system without a reaction, suggesting testosterone was not the allergen.
Journal title :
Dermatitis
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Dermatitis
Record number :
460984
Link To Document :
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