Background: Primary hyperhidrosis (PHH) is a disorder of excessive sweating caused by aberrant cholinergic signaling. Sensitive skin (SS) is a condition of subjective cutaneous hyperreactivity to innocuous stimuli, impacting 40% to 70% of the population. SS is exacerbated by sweat, stress, and heat, suggesting that cholinergic stimulation may contribute to SS flares.
Objective: To survey PHH sufferers to assess hyperhidrosis (HH) and SS symptom burden.
Methods: An International Review Board (IRB)-exempt survey was disseminated by the International Hyperhidrosis Society. A predictive classification model for SS was built using random forest machine learning algorithms.
Results: Of the 637 respondents with PHH, 89% reported SS; and there was a significant association between HH and SS severity scores. Importantly, SS occurred on body sites affected and unaffected by HH. Predictive modeling designated Sensitive Scale-10 (SS-10), a validated questionnaire to gauge SS severity, to be the most helpful in predicting SS in this cohort.
Limitations: Self-reported data.
Conclusion: These data are the first to propose and support a relationship between SS and HH. SS occurred with greatest frequency at HH-afflicted body sites, but also occurred on unaffected sites, suggesting that sweat is not the sole causative link. Future work can explore cholinergic signaling as a potential link between these conditions. Screening HH patients for SS may be warranted. J Drugs Dermatol. 2024;23(10):882-888. doi:10.36849/JDD.8461.