PRESS RELEASE February 12, 2026
World First: Aerotoxic Syndrome Recognized as an Occupational Disease Following Chronic Exposure
Toulon / Montpellier – February 12, 2026
The Toulon Judicial Court (France) – Social Division, in a judgment delivered on December 19, 2025, ordered the recognition and coverage under occupational risk legislation of a pathology attributable to chronic exposure to aircraft engine oil fumes.
The certificate of non-appeal issued on February 5, 2026 renders this decision final and binding.
This constitutes the first final judicial recognition worldwide of aerotoxic syndrome linked to chronic exposure, in the absence of an identified acute “fume event.”
A Historic Judicial Decision
The Court recognized the existence of a direct and essential link between the professional activity of an airline pilot and:
“Central and peripheral autoimmune neuropathy with demyelinating syndrome.”
Despite two successive unfavorable opinions issued by Regional Committees for the Recognition of Occupational Diseases (CRRMP), the Court held that:
- occupational exposure to organophosphate compounds derived from engine oils was established;
- metallic and chemical particles were found in the claimant’s body;
- the chronology of symptom onset was consistent with occupational exposure;
- no convincing alternative cause had been demonstrated;
- the absence of an international scientific consensus does not prevent recognition of a causal link in a properly substantiated individual case.
The Primary Health Insurance Fund (CPAM) of the Var was ordered to recognize and cover the pathology under occupational disease legislation.
This ruling comes in a context where “aerotoxic syndrome” does not currently benefit from official nosological recognition by major international health agencies.
The Court nevertheless affirmed that general scientific uncertainty cannot prevent recognition of occupational harm when a body of precise, consistent, and circumstantial evidence establishes causation.
France thus becomes the first country to definitively recognize, through a final judicial decision, a chronic pathology linked to repeated exposure to cabin air contaminants.
Significant Legal and Regulatory Impact This decision:
- paves the way for further individual recognitions;
- establishes an important judicial precedent concerning emerging occupational risks;
- calls upon aviation and health regulatory authorities to reassess current frameworks;
- reignites the debate on cabin air quality and crew protection.
Association “Loi de 1901” n° W062009779 Siège social : Bureau 3 - 50 boulevard Stalingrad - 06300 Nice www.syndrome-aerotoxique.com [email protected]
| AVSA Court Ruling 2026 Original French Version |
| AVSA Court Ruling 2026 English Version |
| AVSA Court Ruling 2026 German Version |
| AVSA Court Ruling 2026 Portuguese Version |
| AVSA Court Ruling Italian Version |
| AVSA Court Ruling Spanish Version |