Coronavirus outbreak prompts cancellation of AAD annual meeting

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The American Academy of Dermatology annual meeting is the latest large medical conference to be canceled because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak.

Dr. George J. Hruza

“After carefully weighing the emerging facts, as well as our duties to the Academy, our members, other meeting attendees, and the local communities we as dermatologists serve, the AAD has made the difficult but necessary decision to cancel the AAD 2020 Annual Meeting in Denver,” AAD President George Hruza, MD, said in an announcement posted on the AAD’s website late on March 9. “We also want to respect our physicians’ need to be available to and healthy for their own patients, communities, and countries,” he added.

Earlier in the day, the American College of Cardiology announced that its annual meeting would be canceled, as did the Society of Gynecologic Oncology.

In his statement, Dr. Hruza said that the AAD is looking into “virtual meeting options” to provide content that was scheduled to be presented at the meeting.

Updates on those plans will be posted on the AAD’s website at www.aad.org.

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The American Academy of Dermatology annual meeting is the latest large medical conference to be canceled because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak.

Dr. George J. Hruza

“After carefully weighing the emerging facts, as well as our duties to the Academy, our members, other meeting attendees, and the local communities we as dermatologists serve, the AAD has made the difficult but necessary decision to cancel the AAD 2020 Annual Meeting in Denver,” AAD President George Hruza, MD, said in an announcement posted on the AAD’s website late on March 9. “We also want to respect our physicians’ need to be available to and healthy for their own patients, communities, and countries,” he added.

Earlier in the day, the American College of Cardiology announced that its annual meeting would be canceled, as did the Society of Gynecologic Oncology.

In his statement, Dr. Hruza said that the AAD is looking into “virtual meeting options” to provide content that was scheduled to be presented at the meeting.

Updates on those plans will be posted on the AAD’s website at www.aad.org.

 

The American Academy of Dermatology annual meeting is the latest large medical conference to be canceled because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak.

Dr. George J. Hruza

“After carefully weighing the emerging facts, as well as our duties to the Academy, our members, other meeting attendees, and the local communities we as dermatologists serve, the AAD has made the difficult but necessary decision to cancel the AAD 2020 Annual Meeting in Denver,” AAD President George Hruza, MD, said in an announcement posted on the AAD’s website late on March 9. “We also want to respect our physicians’ need to be available to and healthy for their own patients, communities, and countries,” he added.

Earlier in the day, the American College of Cardiology announced that its annual meeting would be canceled, as did the Society of Gynecologic Oncology.

In his statement, Dr. Hruza said that the AAD is looking into “virtual meeting options” to provide content that was scheduled to be presented at the meeting.

Updates on those plans will be posted on the AAD’s website at www.aad.org.

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Isotretinoin data provide postmeal absorption guidance

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Recent data on the lidose formulation of isotretinoin indicate that, when taken without food, beneficial results of treatment in patients with acne still can be expected, Hilary E. Baldwin, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

It is recommended that isotretinoin, which is fat-soluble, be taken with food, preferably high-fat foods. So it has been unclear what the effect would be when taken with lower-fat food, such as low-fat cereal and raspberries, for example, Dr. Baldwin, medical director of the Acne Treatment and Research Center in New York, pointed out.

“We’ve been trying for years to figure out how we’re going to get around this,” and there have not been any relevant data available until recently, other than in the setting of taking isotretinoin on an empty stomach or with a high-fat meal, she commented.

She referred to a open-label, single-dose, randomized crossover study that compared the bioavailability of the lidose formulation of isotretinoin (Absorica) and brand name Accutane, at a dose of 40 mg either on top of a fatty meal (the Food and Drug Administration-stipulated high-fat, high-calorie diet) or after a 10-hour fast; 60 patients did all four arms, with a 21-day washout period between them (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2013 Nov;69[5]:762-7).

In the fed state, both isotretinoin formulations were absorbed to the same extent, “but in the fasting state, there was a considerable difference,” Dr. Baldwin said. Absorption of both dropped in the fasting state, but the drop was more extreme with Accutane, “about a 50% difference between the two, in terms of how much drug was getting into the system,” she noted.

That is important because weight-based dosing is considered with isotretinoin, so at the end of treatment, a patient who has been taking it on an empty stomach may be getting a 60% lower dose than prescribed, “which could lead to a lessening of the effectiveness of the drug and also an increase in relapse over time.”

But how would a low-fat meal, like low-fat cereal and raspberries, affect the absorption, and ultimate efficacy?

This question was addressed in an open-label, single-arm study of 163 patients with acne, who were taking the lidose isotretinoin formulation without food, at the standard dose, for no longer than 20 weeks. Whether they relapsed was evaluated in a 2-year observational phase of the study, Dr. Baldwin said.

At the end of the trial, the drug was considered effective, with improvements in IGA (the 5-point Investigator’s Global Assessment scale). But the change from baseline was maintained at the 2-year posttreatment period, so the benefits of treatment lasted, which indicates that patients can take it “on top of absolutely no food whatsoever ... so if they eat anything, we are headed in the right direction,” including a low-fat meal. During the 2-year period, most patients did not need to be retreated. Of those people who needed treatment, only 4.2% needed treatment with isotretinoin, which is better than the historical relapse rates with isotretinoin, she noted.

Dr. Baldwin’s disclosures included being on the speakers’ bureau, serving as an advisor, and/or an investigator for companies that include Almirall, BioPharmx, Foamix, Galderma, Ortho Dermatologics, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and La Roche–Posay.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Recent data on the lidose formulation of isotretinoin indicate that, when taken without food, beneficial results of treatment in patients with acne still can be expected, Hilary E. Baldwin, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

It is recommended that isotretinoin, which is fat-soluble, be taken with food, preferably high-fat foods. So it has been unclear what the effect would be when taken with lower-fat food, such as low-fat cereal and raspberries, for example, Dr. Baldwin, medical director of the Acne Treatment and Research Center in New York, pointed out.

“We’ve been trying for years to figure out how we’re going to get around this,” and there have not been any relevant data available until recently, other than in the setting of taking isotretinoin on an empty stomach or with a high-fat meal, she commented.

She referred to a open-label, single-dose, randomized crossover study that compared the bioavailability of the lidose formulation of isotretinoin (Absorica) and brand name Accutane, at a dose of 40 mg either on top of a fatty meal (the Food and Drug Administration-stipulated high-fat, high-calorie diet) or after a 10-hour fast; 60 patients did all four arms, with a 21-day washout period between them (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2013 Nov;69[5]:762-7).

In the fed state, both isotretinoin formulations were absorbed to the same extent, “but in the fasting state, there was a considerable difference,” Dr. Baldwin said. Absorption of both dropped in the fasting state, but the drop was more extreme with Accutane, “about a 50% difference between the two, in terms of how much drug was getting into the system,” she noted.

That is important because weight-based dosing is considered with isotretinoin, so at the end of treatment, a patient who has been taking it on an empty stomach may be getting a 60% lower dose than prescribed, “which could lead to a lessening of the effectiveness of the drug and also an increase in relapse over time.”

But how would a low-fat meal, like low-fat cereal and raspberries, affect the absorption, and ultimate efficacy?

This question was addressed in an open-label, single-arm study of 163 patients with acne, who were taking the lidose isotretinoin formulation without food, at the standard dose, for no longer than 20 weeks. Whether they relapsed was evaluated in a 2-year observational phase of the study, Dr. Baldwin said.

At the end of the trial, the drug was considered effective, with improvements in IGA (the 5-point Investigator’s Global Assessment scale). But the change from baseline was maintained at the 2-year posttreatment period, so the benefits of treatment lasted, which indicates that patients can take it “on top of absolutely no food whatsoever ... so if they eat anything, we are headed in the right direction,” including a low-fat meal. During the 2-year period, most patients did not need to be retreated. Of those people who needed treatment, only 4.2% needed treatment with isotretinoin, which is better than the historical relapse rates with isotretinoin, she noted.

Dr. Baldwin’s disclosures included being on the speakers’ bureau, serving as an advisor, and/or an investigator for companies that include Almirall, BioPharmx, Foamix, Galderma, Ortho Dermatologics, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and La Roche–Posay.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

 

LAHAINA, HAWAII – Recent data on the lidose formulation of isotretinoin indicate that, when taken without food, beneficial results of treatment in patients with acne still can be expected, Hilary E. Baldwin, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

It is recommended that isotretinoin, which is fat-soluble, be taken with food, preferably high-fat foods. So it has been unclear what the effect would be when taken with lower-fat food, such as low-fat cereal and raspberries, for example, Dr. Baldwin, medical director of the Acne Treatment and Research Center in New York, pointed out.

“We’ve been trying for years to figure out how we’re going to get around this,” and there have not been any relevant data available until recently, other than in the setting of taking isotretinoin on an empty stomach or with a high-fat meal, she commented.

She referred to a open-label, single-dose, randomized crossover study that compared the bioavailability of the lidose formulation of isotretinoin (Absorica) and brand name Accutane, at a dose of 40 mg either on top of a fatty meal (the Food and Drug Administration-stipulated high-fat, high-calorie diet) or after a 10-hour fast; 60 patients did all four arms, with a 21-day washout period between them (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2013 Nov;69[5]:762-7).

In the fed state, both isotretinoin formulations were absorbed to the same extent, “but in the fasting state, there was a considerable difference,” Dr. Baldwin said. Absorption of both dropped in the fasting state, but the drop was more extreme with Accutane, “about a 50% difference between the two, in terms of how much drug was getting into the system,” she noted.

That is important because weight-based dosing is considered with isotretinoin, so at the end of treatment, a patient who has been taking it on an empty stomach may be getting a 60% lower dose than prescribed, “which could lead to a lessening of the effectiveness of the drug and also an increase in relapse over time.”

But how would a low-fat meal, like low-fat cereal and raspberries, affect the absorption, and ultimate efficacy?

This question was addressed in an open-label, single-arm study of 163 patients with acne, who were taking the lidose isotretinoin formulation without food, at the standard dose, for no longer than 20 weeks. Whether they relapsed was evaluated in a 2-year observational phase of the study, Dr. Baldwin said.

At the end of the trial, the drug was considered effective, with improvements in IGA (the 5-point Investigator’s Global Assessment scale). But the change from baseline was maintained at the 2-year posttreatment period, so the benefits of treatment lasted, which indicates that patients can take it “on top of absolutely no food whatsoever ... so if they eat anything, we are headed in the right direction,” including a low-fat meal. During the 2-year period, most patients did not need to be retreated. Of those people who needed treatment, only 4.2% needed treatment with isotretinoin, which is better than the historical relapse rates with isotretinoin, she noted.

Dr. Baldwin’s disclosures included being on the speakers’ bureau, serving as an advisor, and/or an investigator for companies that include Almirall, BioPharmx, Foamix, Galderma, Ortho Dermatologics, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and La Roche–Posay.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Studies add clarity to link between rosacea and Demodex, coffee

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Studies add clarity to link between rosacea and Demodex, coffee

LAHAINA, HAWAII – Recent data on the roles of caffeinated coffee and two types of Demodex species play in rosacea were discussed by Linda Stein Gold, MD, at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Linda Stein Gold

When considering rosacea triggers, the role of coffee has been difficult to determine, according to Dr. Stein Gold, director of dermatology research at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit.

“We know that caffeine can vasoconstrict, it also has anti-inflammatory properties so ... that might help rosacea,” while the heat from a hot cup of coffee may cause vasodilation “and make rosacea worse,” she noted.

But a recent study of data from the Nurses’ Health Study II that evaluated intake of coffee, tea, soda, and chocolate every 4 years in over 82,000 women shed some light on the role coffee may play (JAMA Dermatol. 2018 Dec 1;154[12]:1394-1400). There were almost 5,000 cases of physician-diagnosed rosacea in the cohort. When the investigators looked at caffeinated coffee consumption, “the more caffeine and the more coffee they drank each day, the more likely it was for them not to have rosacea,” she said.



Those who consumed four or more servings of caffeinated coffee a day had a significantly lower risk of rosacea, compared with those who consumed one or fewer servings per month (hazard ratio, 0.77; 95% confidence interval, 0.69-0.87; P less than .001).

But there was no significant association with decaffeinated coffee or with edibles that contained caffeine such as tea, soda, and chocolate, “so something about caffeinated coffee seems to be protective for the development of rosacea,” Dr. Stein Gold said.

Demodex mites

A few years ago, “we really didn’t think much of Demodex, but now we know Demodex tends to be a key player” in people with rosacea, Dr. Stein Gold said.

National Rosacea Society
Demodex mite

In adults, the colonization rate of Demodex ranges from 70% to 100%, but the skin of people with rosacea have a particularly high density of Demodex: About 35%-50% of patients with rosacea have an increased Demodex load above 5 mites per cm2, as measured with a standard skin surface biopsy, she noted. The density of Demodex in the skin of patients with rosacea has been measured at sixfold higher, compared with age-matched controls.

There also are two different Demodex species: Demodex folliculorum, which are longer, and Demodex brevis, which are short, and there is evidence that each “may cause an individual reaction,” Dr. Stein Gold said.

She referred to a study that found a difference in the Demodex population in patients with highly inflammatory disease with a high level of Demodex, mild rosacea patients who did not have a lot of Demodex, and people with no rosacea (Dermatol Reports. 2019 Jan 23;11[1]:7675).

“Those people who had really severe, inflammatory rosacea had Demodex folliculorum,” and the patients with the more mild disease or those with clear skin had Demodex brevis, she said, so “different species of Demodex might cause a different inflammatory reaction within individual rosacea patients.”

Dr. Stein Gold reported that she has served as a consultant, investigator, or speaker for Galderma, Dermira, Foamix Pharmaceuticals, Valeant (now Bausch Health), Allergan, Actavis, and Roche.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Recent data on the roles of caffeinated coffee and two types of Demodex species play in rosacea were discussed by Linda Stein Gold, MD, at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Linda Stein Gold

When considering rosacea triggers, the role of coffee has been difficult to determine, according to Dr. Stein Gold, director of dermatology research at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit.

“We know that caffeine can vasoconstrict, it also has anti-inflammatory properties so ... that might help rosacea,” while the heat from a hot cup of coffee may cause vasodilation “and make rosacea worse,” she noted.

But a recent study of data from the Nurses’ Health Study II that evaluated intake of coffee, tea, soda, and chocolate every 4 years in over 82,000 women shed some light on the role coffee may play (JAMA Dermatol. 2018 Dec 1;154[12]:1394-1400). There were almost 5,000 cases of physician-diagnosed rosacea in the cohort. When the investigators looked at caffeinated coffee consumption, “the more caffeine and the more coffee they drank each day, the more likely it was for them not to have rosacea,” she said.



Those who consumed four or more servings of caffeinated coffee a day had a significantly lower risk of rosacea, compared with those who consumed one or fewer servings per month (hazard ratio, 0.77; 95% confidence interval, 0.69-0.87; P less than .001).

But there was no significant association with decaffeinated coffee or with edibles that contained caffeine such as tea, soda, and chocolate, “so something about caffeinated coffee seems to be protective for the development of rosacea,” Dr. Stein Gold said.

Demodex mites

A few years ago, “we really didn’t think much of Demodex, but now we know Demodex tends to be a key player” in people with rosacea, Dr. Stein Gold said.

National Rosacea Society
Demodex mite

In adults, the colonization rate of Demodex ranges from 70% to 100%, but the skin of people with rosacea have a particularly high density of Demodex: About 35%-50% of patients with rosacea have an increased Demodex load above 5 mites per cm2, as measured with a standard skin surface biopsy, she noted. The density of Demodex in the skin of patients with rosacea has been measured at sixfold higher, compared with age-matched controls.

There also are two different Demodex species: Demodex folliculorum, which are longer, and Demodex brevis, which are short, and there is evidence that each “may cause an individual reaction,” Dr. Stein Gold said.

She referred to a study that found a difference in the Demodex population in patients with highly inflammatory disease with a high level of Demodex, mild rosacea patients who did not have a lot of Demodex, and people with no rosacea (Dermatol Reports. 2019 Jan 23;11[1]:7675).

“Those people who had really severe, inflammatory rosacea had Demodex folliculorum,” and the patients with the more mild disease or those with clear skin had Demodex brevis, she said, so “different species of Demodex might cause a different inflammatory reaction within individual rosacea patients.”

Dr. Stein Gold reported that she has served as a consultant, investigator, or speaker for Galderma, Dermira, Foamix Pharmaceuticals, Valeant (now Bausch Health), Allergan, Actavis, and Roche.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

LAHAINA, HAWAII – Recent data on the roles of caffeinated coffee and two types of Demodex species play in rosacea were discussed by Linda Stein Gold, MD, at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Linda Stein Gold

When considering rosacea triggers, the role of coffee has been difficult to determine, according to Dr. Stein Gold, director of dermatology research at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit.

“We know that caffeine can vasoconstrict, it also has anti-inflammatory properties so ... that might help rosacea,” while the heat from a hot cup of coffee may cause vasodilation “and make rosacea worse,” she noted.

But a recent study of data from the Nurses’ Health Study II that evaluated intake of coffee, tea, soda, and chocolate every 4 years in over 82,000 women shed some light on the role coffee may play (JAMA Dermatol. 2018 Dec 1;154[12]:1394-1400). There were almost 5,000 cases of physician-diagnosed rosacea in the cohort. When the investigators looked at caffeinated coffee consumption, “the more caffeine and the more coffee they drank each day, the more likely it was for them not to have rosacea,” she said.



Those who consumed four or more servings of caffeinated coffee a day had a significantly lower risk of rosacea, compared with those who consumed one or fewer servings per month (hazard ratio, 0.77; 95% confidence interval, 0.69-0.87; P less than .001).

But there was no significant association with decaffeinated coffee or with edibles that contained caffeine such as tea, soda, and chocolate, “so something about caffeinated coffee seems to be protective for the development of rosacea,” Dr. Stein Gold said.

Demodex mites

A few years ago, “we really didn’t think much of Demodex, but now we know Demodex tends to be a key player” in people with rosacea, Dr. Stein Gold said.

National Rosacea Society
Demodex mite

In adults, the colonization rate of Demodex ranges from 70% to 100%, but the skin of people with rosacea have a particularly high density of Demodex: About 35%-50% of patients with rosacea have an increased Demodex load above 5 mites per cm2, as measured with a standard skin surface biopsy, she noted. The density of Demodex in the skin of patients with rosacea has been measured at sixfold higher, compared with age-matched controls.

There also are two different Demodex species: Demodex folliculorum, which are longer, and Demodex brevis, which are short, and there is evidence that each “may cause an individual reaction,” Dr. Stein Gold said.

She referred to a study that found a difference in the Demodex population in patients with highly inflammatory disease with a high level of Demodex, mild rosacea patients who did not have a lot of Demodex, and people with no rosacea (Dermatol Reports. 2019 Jan 23;11[1]:7675).

“Those people who had really severe, inflammatory rosacea had Demodex folliculorum,” and the patients with the more mild disease or those with clear skin had Demodex brevis, she said, so “different species of Demodex might cause a different inflammatory reaction within individual rosacea patients.”

Dr. Stein Gold reported that she has served as a consultant, investigator, or speaker for Galderma, Dermira, Foamix Pharmaceuticals, Valeant (now Bausch Health), Allergan, Actavis, and Roche.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Data overwhelmingly support use of dermoscopy in practice

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Multiple studies, including meta-analyses, have shown that dermoscopy improves sensitivity for diagnosing melanoma, without lowering specificity, but there are still some “nonbelievers,” Ashfaq A. Marghoob, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

In fact, not one study has shown that dermoscopy is less sensitive than the naked eye alone, and at clinics where dermoscopy is used, “two-thirds of the melanomas being detected now lack the classic ABCD features of melanoma,” added Dr. Marghoob, director of clinical dermatology at Memorial Sloan Kettering in Hauppauge, N.Y.

Dr. Marghoob cited a meta-analysis of 9 prospective trials, which concluded that dermoscopy was more accurate in diagnosing melanoma than the naked eye alone and did not lower specificity, with a sensitivity and specificity of 90%, compared with 71% and 81%, respectively for the naked eye (Br J Dermatol. 2008 Sep;159[3]:669-76).

“And at least from an evidence-based standpoint ... the Cochrane library has basically endorsed that, yes, dermoscopy does indeed improve your diagnostic accuracy,” Dr. Marghoob said.

He referred to a 2018 Cochrane review on 104 dermoscopy studies, with and without visual inspection, for diagnosing melanoma in adults (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Dec 4;12:CD011902). The review authors concluded that “the evidence suggests that melanomas will be missed if visual inspection is used on its own,” and despite limitations in the evidence, “dermoscopy is a valuable tool to support the visual inspection of a suspicious skin lesion for the detection of melanoma and atypical intraepidermal melanocytic variants.”

As for the question of specificity, Dr. Marghoob said studies have found that dermoscopy results in the detection of more melanomas and reduces the number of biopsies of benign lesions and “every study looking into this has shown that, yes, it does improve” specificity.

A 10-year multicenter survey of about 300,000 cases, which included 17,172 melanomas and 283,043 melanocytic nevi, found that the number-needed-to-excise (NNE) values improved over time in specialized clinics where newer diagnostic techniques like dermoscopy were used (from 12.8 to 6.8), but the NNE did not appear to change in the nonspecialized settings (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2012 Jul;67[1]:54-9).

Looking at the benign-to-malignant ratio, there was no change among those not using dermoscopy, where the ratio remained at about 30 to 1. When dermoscopy was used, this ratio started to improve over the 10-year period, to about 5 to 1. In addition, “the dermoscopy users were finding many more melanomas than the non–dermoscopy users,” Dr. Marghoob added. And over the 10 years, the number of nevi being removed did not change among those not using dermoscopy but dropped among those using dermoscopy.

Adding photography with the ability to digitally monitor patients helps bring this ratio down further, Dr. Marghoob noted. He referred to a study that instead evaluated the ratio of melanoma to nonmelanomas diagnosed among dermatologists in three groups: those with no digital dermoscopy with little dermoscopy training (group A, the reference group), no digital dermoscopy but more dermoscopy training (group B), and those using digital dermoscopy (group C). In the group that used digital dermoscopy, that ratio was about 1 to 2.4, compared with about 1 to 8 in group B, and about 1 to 10.7 in group A (Br J Dermatol. 2012;167[4]778-86).

The use of dermoscopy is also associated with thinner tumors. Among dermoscopy users, the thickness of the tumors detected drops, and the proportion of thin to thick lesions detected increases, Dr. Marghoob said.

For example, in one study, the mean thickness in melanomas detected with dermoscopy was 1.4 mm versus 2.59 mm when dermoscopy was not used (J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2015 Jan; 29[1]:102-8). About 55% of the tumors detected with dermoscopic examination were 1 mm or less in thickness versus 23.4% of those detected without dermoscopy, “so the dermoscopy users from a proportion standpoint were also finding thinner tumors,” Dr. Marghoob said. Dermoscopy was also identified as an independent predictor of finding thinner tumors.

Even without a study, it could be assumed that the use of dermoscopy would reduce costs, since dermoscopy increases sensitivity and the total number of melanomas detected, decreases the number of benign nevi removed, and helps detect disease earlier. But there are data showing that dermoscopy reduces health care costs, Dr. Marghoob said.* For example, a Belgian study that looked at dermoscopy in two cohorts of melanoma patients concluded that adequate dermoscopy training was cost effective (Eur J Cancer. 2016 Nov;67:38-45).

It has also been shown that adding dermoscopy to a primary care setting has cost benefits, Dr. Marghoob said. He cited a study of Dutch general practices that found that the probability of a correct diagnosis was 1.25 times higher when dermoscopy was used to evaluate suspicious skin lesions and concluded that the use of dermoscopy appeared to be cost effective (J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2014 Nov;28[11]:1442-9).

Dr. Marghoob had no disclosures relevant to this presentation.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

*Correction, 2/28/20: An earlier version of this article mischaracterized the cost implications of dermoscopy use.

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Multiple studies, including meta-analyses, have shown that dermoscopy improves sensitivity for diagnosing melanoma, without lowering specificity, but there are still some “nonbelievers,” Ashfaq A. Marghoob, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

In fact, not one study has shown that dermoscopy is less sensitive than the naked eye alone, and at clinics where dermoscopy is used, “two-thirds of the melanomas being detected now lack the classic ABCD features of melanoma,” added Dr. Marghoob, director of clinical dermatology at Memorial Sloan Kettering in Hauppauge, N.Y.

Dr. Marghoob cited a meta-analysis of 9 prospective trials, which concluded that dermoscopy was more accurate in diagnosing melanoma than the naked eye alone and did not lower specificity, with a sensitivity and specificity of 90%, compared with 71% and 81%, respectively for the naked eye (Br J Dermatol. 2008 Sep;159[3]:669-76).

“And at least from an evidence-based standpoint ... the Cochrane library has basically endorsed that, yes, dermoscopy does indeed improve your diagnostic accuracy,” Dr. Marghoob said.

He referred to a 2018 Cochrane review on 104 dermoscopy studies, with and without visual inspection, for diagnosing melanoma in adults (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Dec 4;12:CD011902). The review authors concluded that “the evidence suggests that melanomas will be missed if visual inspection is used on its own,” and despite limitations in the evidence, “dermoscopy is a valuable tool to support the visual inspection of a suspicious skin lesion for the detection of melanoma and atypical intraepidermal melanocytic variants.”

As for the question of specificity, Dr. Marghoob said studies have found that dermoscopy results in the detection of more melanomas and reduces the number of biopsies of benign lesions and “every study looking into this has shown that, yes, it does improve” specificity.

A 10-year multicenter survey of about 300,000 cases, which included 17,172 melanomas and 283,043 melanocytic nevi, found that the number-needed-to-excise (NNE) values improved over time in specialized clinics where newer diagnostic techniques like dermoscopy were used (from 12.8 to 6.8), but the NNE did not appear to change in the nonspecialized settings (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2012 Jul;67[1]:54-9).

Looking at the benign-to-malignant ratio, there was no change among those not using dermoscopy, where the ratio remained at about 30 to 1. When dermoscopy was used, this ratio started to improve over the 10-year period, to about 5 to 1. In addition, “the dermoscopy users were finding many more melanomas than the non–dermoscopy users,” Dr. Marghoob added. And over the 10 years, the number of nevi being removed did not change among those not using dermoscopy but dropped among those using dermoscopy.

Adding photography with the ability to digitally monitor patients helps bring this ratio down further, Dr. Marghoob noted. He referred to a study that instead evaluated the ratio of melanoma to nonmelanomas diagnosed among dermatologists in three groups: those with no digital dermoscopy with little dermoscopy training (group A, the reference group), no digital dermoscopy but more dermoscopy training (group B), and those using digital dermoscopy (group C). In the group that used digital dermoscopy, that ratio was about 1 to 2.4, compared with about 1 to 8 in group B, and about 1 to 10.7 in group A (Br J Dermatol. 2012;167[4]778-86).

The use of dermoscopy is also associated with thinner tumors. Among dermoscopy users, the thickness of the tumors detected drops, and the proportion of thin to thick lesions detected increases, Dr. Marghoob said.

For example, in one study, the mean thickness in melanomas detected with dermoscopy was 1.4 mm versus 2.59 mm when dermoscopy was not used (J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2015 Jan; 29[1]:102-8). About 55% of the tumors detected with dermoscopic examination were 1 mm or less in thickness versus 23.4% of those detected without dermoscopy, “so the dermoscopy users from a proportion standpoint were also finding thinner tumors,” Dr. Marghoob said. Dermoscopy was also identified as an independent predictor of finding thinner tumors.

Even without a study, it could be assumed that the use of dermoscopy would reduce costs, since dermoscopy increases sensitivity and the total number of melanomas detected, decreases the number of benign nevi removed, and helps detect disease earlier. But there are data showing that dermoscopy reduces health care costs, Dr. Marghoob said.* For example, a Belgian study that looked at dermoscopy in two cohorts of melanoma patients concluded that adequate dermoscopy training was cost effective (Eur J Cancer. 2016 Nov;67:38-45).

It has also been shown that adding dermoscopy to a primary care setting has cost benefits, Dr. Marghoob said. He cited a study of Dutch general practices that found that the probability of a correct diagnosis was 1.25 times higher when dermoscopy was used to evaluate suspicious skin lesions and concluded that the use of dermoscopy appeared to be cost effective (J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2014 Nov;28[11]:1442-9).

Dr. Marghoob had no disclosures relevant to this presentation.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

*Correction, 2/28/20: An earlier version of this article mischaracterized the cost implications of dermoscopy use.

LAHAINA, HAWAII – Multiple studies, including meta-analyses, have shown that dermoscopy improves sensitivity for diagnosing melanoma, without lowering specificity, but there are still some “nonbelievers,” Ashfaq A. Marghoob, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

In fact, not one study has shown that dermoscopy is less sensitive than the naked eye alone, and at clinics where dermoscopy is used, “two-thirds of the melanomas being detected now lack the classic ABCD features of melanoma,” added Dr. Marghoob, director of clinical dermatology at Memorial Sloan Kettering in Hauppauge, N.Y.

Dr. Marghoob cited a meta-analysis of 9 prospective trials, which concluded that dermoscopy was more accurate in diagnosing melanoma than the naked eye alone and did not lower specificity, with a sensitivity and specificity of 90%, compared with 71% and 81%, respectively for the naked eye (Br J Dermatol. 2008 Sep;159[3]:669-76).

“And at least from an evidence-based standpoint ... the Cochrane library has basically endorsed that, yes, dermoscopy does indeed improve your diagnostic accuracy,” Dr. Marghoob said.

He referred to a 2018 Cochrane review on 104 dermoscopy studies, with and without visual inspection, for diagnosing melanoma in adults (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Dec 4;12:CD011902). The review authors concluded that “the evidence suggests that melanomas will be missed if visual inspection is used on its own,” and despite limitations in the evidence, “dermoscopy is a valuable tool to support the visual inspection of a suspicious skin lesion for the detection of melanoma and atypical intraepidermal melanocytic variants.”

As for the question of specificity, Dr. Marghoob said studies have found that dermoscopy results in the detection of more melanomas and reduces the number of biopsies of benign lesions and “every study looking into this has shown that, yes, it does improve” specificity.

A 10-year multicenter survey of about 300,000 cases, which included 17,172 melanomas and 283,043 melanocytic nevi, found that the number-needed-to-excise (NNE) values improved over time in specialized clinics where newer diagnostic techniques like dermoscopy were used (from 12.8 to 6.8), but the NNE did not appear to change in the nonspecialized settings (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2012 Jul;67[1]:54-9).

Looking at the benign-to-malignant ratio, there was no change among those not using dermoscopy, where the ratio remained at about 30 to 1. When dermoscopy was used, this ratio started to improve over the 10-year period, to about 5 to 1. In addition, “the dermoscopy users were finding many more melanomas than the non–dermoscopy users,” Dr. Marghoob added. And over the 10 years, the number of nevi being removed did not change among those not using dermoscopy but dropped among those using dermoscopy.

Adding photography with the ability to digitally monitor patients helps bring this ratio down further, Dr. Marghoob noted. He referred to a study that instead evaluated the ratio of melanoma to nonmelanomas diagnosed among dermatologists in three groups: those with no digital dermoscopy with little dermoscopy training (group A, the reference group), no digital dermoscopy but more dermoscopy training (group B), and those using digital dermoscopy (group C). In the group that used digital dermoscopy, that ratio was about 1 to 2.4, compared with about 1 to 8 in group B, and about 1 to 10.7 in group A (Br J Dermatol. 2012;167[4]778-86).

The use of dermoscopy is also associated with thinner tumors. Among dermoscopy users, the thickness of the tumors detected drops, and the proportion of thin to thick lesions detected increases, Dr. Marghoob said.

For example, in one study, the mean thickness in melanomas detected with dermoscopy was 1.4 mm versus 2.59 mm when dermoscopy was not used (J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2015 Jan; 29[1]:102-8). About 55% of the tumors detected with dermoscopic examination were 1 mm or less in thickness versus 23.4% of those detected without dermoscopy, “so the dermoscopy users from a proportion standpoint were also finding thinner tumors,” Dr. Marghoob said. Dermoscopy was also identified as an independent predictor of finding thinner tumors.

Even without a study, it could be assumed that the use of dermoscopy would reduce costs, since dermoscopy increases sensitivity and the total number of melanomas detected, decreases the number of benign nevi removed, and helps detect disease earlier. But there are data showing that dermoscopy reduces health care costs, Dr. Marghoob said.* For example, a Belgian study that looked at dermoscopy in two cohorts of melanoma patients concluded that adequate dermoscopy training was cost effective (Eur J Cancer. 2016 Nov;67:38-45).

It has also been shown that adding dermoscopy to a primary care setting has cost benefits, Dr. Marghoob said. He cited a study of Dutch general practices that found that the probability of a correct diagnosis was 1.25 times higher when dermoscopy was used to evaluate suspicious skin lesions and concluded that the use of dermoscopy appeared to be cost effective (J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2014 Nov;28[11]:1442-9).

Dr. Marghoob had no disclosures relevant to this presentation.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

*Correction, 2/28/20: An earlier version of this article mischaracterized the cost implications of dermoscopy use.

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Morning and evening skin care: What to tell patients

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“Protect and prevent” by applying an antioxidant and sunscreen in the morning, and focus on repair using a retinoid in the evening. That’s the simple message about daily skin care that clinicians can offer patients, according to Brooke Sikora, MD.

“At a very basic level, you want to tell your patients [to] use an antioxidant and use your sunscreen” early in the day, said Dr. Sikora, who is in private practice in Chestnut Hill, Mass. “In the evening, it’s all about repairing their damage, so make sure they’re getting on a retinol,” and if they can’t tolerate prescription strength, try a nonprescription product, she noted at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

“Aging factors create oxidative stress on the skin that leads to the development of these reactive oxygen species on the skin,” decreasing collagen production and increasing collagen breakdown, she explained during a presentation on cosmeceuticals at the meeting. Applying an antioxidant to the skin, however, can help neutralize “a lot of these reactive oxygen species and help to slow the breakdown of collagen.”

There is good evidence that peptides and growth factors – although expensive – work well and are worth recommending for patients “who really want to take their skin care to the next level,” Dr. Sikora said. “Then you can add corrective products like hyperpigmentation or acne products to treat ... specific concerns” as needed.

In an interview at the meeting, Dr. Sikora discussed these recommendations, as well as vitamin C use in the daily skin care routine. (To listen to the interview, click on the play button below.)

Vitamin C is the best-studied antioxidant, she noted during her presentation, and in vivo studies have shown it can stimulate collagen synthesis, reduce erythema of rosacea (which is why she has all her rosacea patients on vitamin C), reduce post-UVB erythema, decrease facial wrinkles, and increase dermal papillae.

Dr. Sikora disclosed that she is a consultant to and on the advisory board of SkinCeuticals, La Roche–Posay, Silk Therapeutics, Galderma, Evolus, and Allergen. She is on the speakers bureau for SkinCeuticals, La Roche–Posay, Galderma, and Aclaris.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click on the play button below.

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“Protect and prevent” by applying an antioxidant and sunscreen in the morning, and focus on repair using a retinoid in the evening. That’s the simple message about daily skin care that clinicians can offer patients, according to Brooke Sikora, MD.

“At a very basic level, you want to tell your patients [to] use an antioxidant and use your sunscreen” early in the day, said Dr. Sikora, who is in private practice in Chestnut Hill, Mass. “In the evening, it’s all about repairing their damage, so make sure they’re getting on a retinol,” and if they can’t tolerate prescription strength, try a nonprescription product, she noted at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

“Aging factors create oxidative stress on the skin that leads to the development of these reactive oxygen species on the skin,” decreasing collagen production and increasing collagen breakdown, she explained during a presentation on cosmeceuticals at the meeting. Applying an antioxidant to the skin, however, can help neutralize “a lot of these reactive oxygen species and help to slow the breakdown of collagen.”

There is good evidence that peptides and growth factors – although expensive – work well and are worth recommending for patients “who really want to take their skin care to the next level,” Dr. Sikora said. “Then you can add corrective products like hyperpigmentation or acne products to treat ... specific concerns” as needed.

In an interview at the meeting, Dr. Sikora discussed these recommendations, as well as vitamin C use in the daily skin care routine. (To listen to the interview, click on the play button below.)

Vitamin C is the best-studied antioxidant, she noted during her presentation, and in vivo studies have shown it can stimulate collagen synthesis, reduce erythema of rosacea (which is why she has all her rosacea patients on vitamin C), reduce post-UVB erythema, decrease facial wrinkles, and increase dermal papillae.

Dr. Sikora disclosed that she is a consultant to and on the advisory board of SkinCeuticals, La Roche–Posay, Silk Therapeutics, Galderma, Evolus, and Allergen. She is on the speakers bureau for SkinCeuticals, La Roche–Posay, Galderma, and Aclaris.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click on the play button below.

“Protect and prevent” by applying an antioxidant and sunscreen in the morning, and focus on repair using a retinoid in the evening. That’s the simple message about daily skin care that clinicians can offer patients, according to Brooke Sikora, MD.

“At a very basic level, you want to tell your patients [to] use an antioxidant and use your sunscreen” early in the day, said Dr. Sikora, who is in private practice in Chestnut Hill, Mass. “In the evening, it’s all about repairing their damage, so make sure they’re getting on a retinol,” and if they can’t tolerate prescription strength, try a nonprescription product, she noted at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

“Aging factors create oxidative stress on the skin that leads to the development of these reactive oxygen species on the skin,” decreasing collagen production and increasing collagen breakdown, she explained during a presentation on cosmeceuticals at the meeting. Applying an antioxidant to the skin, however, can help neutralize “a lot of these reactive oxygen species and help to slow the breakdown of collagen.”

There is good evidence that peptides and growth factors – although expensive – work well and are worth recommending for patients “who really want to take their skin care to the next level,” Dr. Sikora said. “Then you can add corrective products like hyperpigmentation or acne products to treat ... specific concerns” as needed.

In an interview at the meeting, Dr. Sikora discussed these recommendations, as well as vitamin C use in the daily skin care routine. (To listen to the interview, click on the play button below.)

Vitamin C is the best-studied antioxidant, she noted during her presentation, and in vivo studies have shown it can stimulate collagen synthesis, reduce erythema of rosacea (which is why she has all her rosacea patients on vitamin C), reduce post-UVB erythema, decrease facial wrinkles, and increase dermal papillae.

Dr. Sikora disclosed that she is a consultant to and on the advisory board of SkinCeuticals, La Roche–Posay, Silk Therapeutics, Galderma, Evolus, and Allergen. She is on the speakers bureau for SkinCeuticals, La Roche–Posay, Galderma, and Aclaris.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click on the play button below.

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Patient counseling about what to expect with noninvasive skin tightening is key

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Fri, 02/21/2020 - 10:55

 

– It’s important to counsel patients about the degree of improvement to expect with noninvasive skin tightening procedures, Nazanin Saedi, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Many devices are available that can be used for facial skin tightening, “but there are definitely limitations to what we can do noninvasively, and we really need to educate our patients about what we can do so that they have realistic expectations,” said Dr. Saedi, director of laser surgery and cosmetic dermatology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia.

Treatment with these devices improve skin laxity, and some improve skin texture as well, she said. These devices are not an option for patients who want to have several inches of excess skin removed.

“You have to tell patients that this isn’t a replacement for a face-lift or a mini face-lift,” but patients can expect to see mild and modest improvement, and they’ll continue to see improvement for 3-6 months.

Patient selection is also important. Patients with mild to moderate laxity who do not want to undergo surgery and anesthesia are good candidates, as opposed to those who are older and have thin, sagging skin, Dr. Saedi said, noting that there still is no standard method of defining laxity.

She referred to a recent study illustrating the importance of counseling patients about what to expect. Of the 83 patients in a practice who had undergone microfocused ultrasound treatments and responded to an anonymous survey about the results of treatment, almost 80% reported at least mild improvement (14.5% said the improvement was significant, almost 28% said it was moderate, 37.3% said it was mild, and 20.5% said there was no improvement).

However, although about half (53.1%) reported being satisfied with their results, almost 45% said that the results did not meet their expectations (Lasers Surg Med. 2019;51[6]:495-9).

In an interview at the meeting, Dr. Saedi commented on these results and the importance of counseling.

Listen to the interview by clicking the play button at the end of this story.

During the presentation, Dr. Saedi, who is also codirector of cutaneous surgery in the department of dermatology and cutaneous biology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, reviewed different technologies used for noninvasive skin tightening, including ablative and fractional laser resurfacing, radiofrequency, and microfocused ultrasound with visualization.

She disclosed serving on the advisory board and/or as a consultant for Aerolase, Alastin, Alma, Cartessa Aesthetics, Cynosure, and Vivo Capital, and that she has equipment from these companies, except for Vivo Capital and Alastin.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click the play button below.
 

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– It’s important to counsel patients about the degree of improvement to expect with noninvasive skin tightening procedures, Nazanin Saedi, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Many devices are available that can be used for facial skin tightening, “but there are definitely limitations to what we can do noninvasively, and we really need to educate our patients about what we can do so that they have realistic expectations,” said Dr. Saedi, director of laser surgery and cosmetic dermatology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia.

Treatment with these devices improve skin laxity, and some improve skin texture as well, she said. These devices are not an option for patients who want to have several inches of excess skin removed.

“You have to tell patients that this isn’t a replacement for a face-lift or a mini face-lift,” but patients can expect to see mild and modest improvement, and they’ll continue to see improvement for 3-6 months.

Patient selection is also important. Patients with mild to moderate laxity who do not want to undergo surgery and anesthesia are good candidates, as opposed to those who are older and have thin, sagging skin, Dr. Saedi said, noting that there still is no standard method of defining laxity.

She referred to a recent study illustrating the importance of counseling patients about what to expect. Of the 83 patients in a practice who had undergone microfocused ultrasound treatments and responded to an anonymous survey about the results of treatment, almost 80% reported at least mild improvement (14.5% said the improvement was significant, almost 28% said it was moderate, 37.3% said it was mild, and 20.5% said there was no improvement).

However, although about half (53.1%) reported being satisfied with their results, almost 45% said that the results did not meet their expectations (Lasers Surg Med. 2019;51[6]:495-9).

In an interview at the meeting, Dr. Saedi commented on these results and the importance of counseling.

Listen to the interview by clicking the play button at the end of this story.

During the presentation, Dr. Saedi, who is also codirector of cutaneous surgery in the department of dermatology and cutaneous biology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, reviewed different technologies used for noninvasive skin tightening, including ablative and fractional laser resurfacing, radiofrequency, and microfocused ultrasound with visualization.

She disclosed serving on the advisory board and/or as a consultant for Aerolase, Alastin, Alma, Cartessa Aesthetics, Cynosure, and Vivo Capital, and that she has equipment from these companies, except for Vivo Capital and Alastin.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click the play button below.
 

 

– It’s important to counsel patients about the degree of improvement to expect with noninvasive skin tightening procedures, Nazanin Saedi, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Many devices are available that can be used for facial skin tightening, “but there are definitely limitations to what we can do noninvasively, and we really need to educate our patients about what we can do so that they have realistic expectations,” said Dr. Saedi, director of laser surgery and cosmetic dermatology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia.

Treatment with these devices improve skin laxity, and some improve skin texture as well, she said. These devices are not an option for patients who want to have several inches of excess skin removed.

“You have to tell patients that this isn’t a replacement for a face-lift or a mini face-lift,” but patients can expect to see mild and modest improvement, and they’ll continue to see improvement for 3-6 months.

Patient selection is also important. Patients with mild to moderate laxity who do not want to undergo surgery and anesthesia are good candidates, as opposed to those who are older and have thin, sagging skin, Dr. Saedi said, noting that there still is no standard method of defining laxity.

She referred to a recent study illustrating the importance of counseling patients about what to expect. Of the 83 patients in a practice who had undergone microfocused ultrasound treatments and responded to an anonymous survey about the results of treatment, almost 80% reported at least mild improvement (14.5% said the improvement was significant, almost 28% said it was moderate, 37.3% said it was mild, and 20.5% said there was no improvement).

However, although about half (53.1%) reported being satisfied with their results, almost 45% said that the results did not meet their expectations (Lasers Surg Med. 2019;51[6]:495-9).

In an interview at the meeting, Dr. Saedi commented on these results and the importance of counseling.

Listen to the interview by clicking the play button at the end of this story.

During the presentation, Dr. Saedi, who is also codirector of cutaneous surgery in the department of dermatology and cutaneous biology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, reviewed different technologies used for noninvasive skin tightening, including ablative and fractional laser resurfacing, radiofrequency, and microfocused ultrasound with visualization.

She disclosed serving on the advisory board and/or as a consultant for Aerolase, Alastin, Alma, Cartessa Aesthetics, Cynosure, and Vivo Capital, and that she has equipment from these companies, except for Vivo Capital and Alastin.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click the play button below.
 

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Data back botulinum toxin for facial flushing, androgenetic alopecia

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Tue, 02/25/2020 - 12:22

– The list of nontraditional uses for botulinum toxin type A includes facial flushing, menopausal hot flashes, and androgenetic alopecia, Mark Rubin, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Mark Rubin

There are data to support these uses, and there are data associating botulinum toxin treatment with improvement in depression, which suggest the effect may not be necessarily be related to improvement in appearance, said Dr. Rubin, who is in private practice in Beverly Hills, Calif., and is associate professor of dermatology at the University of California, San Diego.

Facial flushing: Very few people use botulinum toxin for facial flushing, but Dr. Rubin, who is among those who do not, described the data as “impressive.” Several trials, he noted, have found that very small doses can significantly reduce the amount of facial erythema, including an average 45% reduction after 60 days in one trial of 24 women (Acta Med Iran. 2016 Jul;54[7]:454-7).

In another study of 25 patients with facial erythema related to rosacea who were treated with 14-45 units intradermally to the nasal tip, bridge, and alae, there were statistically significant improvements in erythema 1, 2, and 3 months after treatment among the 15 with complete data (Dermatol Surg. 2015 Jan;41 Suppl 1:S9-16).

“If you’re using very small doses and they’re intradermal, there really is minimal risk you’re going to have a problem by inadvertently affecting musculature” in these patients, Dr. Rubin commented.

In another study of 9 patients with rosacea, treatment with incobotulinumtoxinA was associated with a significant reduction in erythema, papules, pustules, and telangiectasias, up to 15 weeks, compared with saline. The treatment patients also experienced less burning and stinging that did those who received saline (J Drugs Dermatol. 2017 Jun 1;16[6]:549-54.)

Menopausal hot flashes: Dr. Rubin described one study of 60 patients with severe hot flashes that compared saline with botulinum toxin, injected in 40 sites (2 units per site), including the neck, hairline, scalp, and chest. At 60 days’ follow-up, those treated with botulinum toxin had a significant reduction in sweating and in the number and severity of hot flashes; these women also had improved mood in terms of depression and irritability (Dermatol Surg. 2011 Nov;37[11]:1579-83).

Androgenetic alopecia: In a 60-week study of 50 men with androgenetic alopecia (Hamilton ratings of II-IV), 150 units of botulinum toxin A was injected into the scalp muscles (temporalis, frontalis, periauricular, and occipital), and repeated 6 months later (Plast Reconstr Surg. 2010 Nov;126[5]:246e-8e). Among the 40 patients who completed the trial, 75% had a response, and from baseline to 48 weeks, there was an 18% increase in mean hair counts in a 2 cm area, and a“profound” 39% reduction in hair loss (as measured by hair counts on the pillow in the morning), Dr. Rubin noted.

“Presumably, this is because if you’re relaxing the scalp muscles you’re getting increased blood flow into the scalp,” including increased oxygenation, which decreases the conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone and increases the conversion of testosterone to estradiol, he said.

In another study, 8 of 10 patients with androgenic alopecia has “good to excellent” results 24 weeks after botulinum toxin injections with 5 units per site at 30 sites. Referring to the increasing popularity of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections for male pattern alopecia, Dr. Rubin said that in his opinion “PRP certainly doesn’t do any better” than botulinum toxin for male pattern alopecia and is a much more involved injection, “so this is definitely something worth considering if you have more people coming into your practice thinking about injections for male pattern alopecia.”

Pore size and sebum production: A 2019 review of published studies of botulinum toxin A looking at the effect on sebum and pore size, Dr. Rubin said, found that most studies “suggest it does actually reduce pore size and sebum production” (J Cosmet Dermatol. 2019 Apr;18[2]:451-7).

This can be considered an option for those patients concerned about pore size, who are not satisfied with results of retinoid or laser treatment, he commented. This approach may not have an effect in all patients, so he advised first treating a small trial area, and photographing patients to record their level of improvement. “It’s rarely profound, but it’s additive, it’s one more thing you can do.”

Depression: These data include a study of 30 patients with major depression, half who received one onabotulinumtoxinA injection in the glabellar area as adjunctive treatment of depression. After 6 weeks, those who were treated had an average of 47% reduction in depression scores on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, compared with an average 9% reduction among those on placebo (J Psychiatr Res. 2012 May;46[5]:574-81). Two recent studies have had similar results, according to Dr. Rubin.

Results of another study, he said, raise the question of whether patients are less depressed because they are pleased with the cosmetic effects or if there is another explanation (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2016 Jan;74[1]:171-3.e1). The study, which included 59 patients with depression treated in the glabellar areas with botulinum toxin injections, found no association between severity of the furrows and degree of depression or between the degree of furrow correction and degree of relief from depression after treatment. “So the patients who had the most improvement were not necessarily the ones who were the least depressed afterwards,” he said.

These data imply that something else may be occurring that is not necessarily muscle related, he said.

Dr. Rubin said he had no relevant disclosures. SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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– The list of nontraditional uses for botulinum toxin type A includes facial flushing, menopausal hot flashes, and androgenetic alopecia, Mark Rubin, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Mark Rubin

There are data to support these uses, and there are data associating botulinum toxin treatment with improvement in depression, which suggest the effect may not be necessarily be related to improvement in appearance, said Dr. Rubin, who is in private practice in Beverly Hills, Calif., and is associate professor of dermatology at the University of California, San Diego.

Facial flushing: Very few people use botulinum toxin for facial flushing, but Dr. Rubin, who is among those who do not, described the data as “impressive.” Several trials, he noted, have found that very small doses can significantly reduce the amount of facial erythema, including an average 45% reduction after 60 days in one trial of 24 women (Acta Med Iran. 2016 Jul;54[7]:454-7).

In another study of 25 patients with facial erythema related to rosacea who were treated with 14-45 units intradermally to the nasal tip, bridge, and alae, there were statistically significant improvements in erythema 1, 2, and 3 months after treatment among the 15 with complete data (Dermatol Surg. 2015 Jan;41 Suppl 1:S9-16).

“If you’re using very small doses and they’re intradermal, there really is minimal risk you’re going to have a problem by inadvertently affecting musculature” in these patients, Dr. Rubin commented.

In another study of 9 patients with rosacea, treatment with incobotulinumtoxinA was associated with a significant reduction in erythema, papules, pustules, and telangiectasias, up to 15 weeks, compared with saline. The treatment patients also experienced less burning and stinging that did those who received saline (J Drugs Dermatol. 2017 Jun 1;16[6]:549-54.)

Menopausal hot flashes: Dr. Rubin described one study of 60 patients with severe hot flashes that compared saline with botulinum toxin, injected in 40 sites (2 units per site), including the neck, hairline, scalp, and chest. At 60 days’ follow-up, those treated with botulinum toxin had a significant reduction in sweating and in the number and severity of hot flashes; these women also had improved mood in terms of depression and irritability (Dermatol Surg. 2011 Nov;37[11]:1579-83).

Androgenetic alopecia: In a 60-week study of 50 men with androgenetic alopecia (Hamilton ratings of II-IV), 150 units of botulinum toxin A was injected into the scalp muscles (temporalis, frontalis, periauricular, and occipital), and repeated 6 months later (Plast Reconstr Surg. 2010 Nov;126[5]:246e-8e). Among the 40 patients who completed the trial, 75% had a response, and from baseline to 48 weeks, there was an 18% increase in mean hair counts in a 2 cm area, and a“profound” 39% reduction in hair loss (as measured by hair counts on the pillow in the morning), Dr. Rubin noted.

“Presumably, this is because if you’re relaxing the scalp muscles you’re getting increased blood flow into the scalp,” including increased oxygenation, which decreases the conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone and increases the conversion of testosterone to estradiol, he said.

In another study, 8 of 10 patients with androgenic alopecia has “good to excellent” results 24 weeks after botulinum toxin injections with 5 units per site at 30 sites. Referring to the increasing popularity of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections for male pattern alopecia, Dr. Rubin said that in his opinion “PRP certainly doesn’t do any better” than botulinum toxin for male pattern alopecia and is a much more involved injection, “so this is definitely something worth considering if you have more people coming into your practice thinking about injections for male pattern alopecia.”

Pore size and sebum production: A 2019 review of published studies of botulinum toxin A looking at the effect on sebum and pore size, Dr. Rubin said, found that most studies “suggest it does actually reduce pore size and sebum production” (J Cosmet Dermatol. 2019 Apr;18[2]:451-7).

This can be considered an option for those patients concerned about pore size, who are not satisfied with results of retinoid or laser treatment, he commented. This approach may not have an effect in all patients, so he advised first treating a small trial area, and photographing patients to record their level of improvement. “It’s rarely profound, but it’s additive, it’s one more thing you can do.”

Depression: These data include a study of 30 patients with major depression, half who received one onabotulinumtoxinA injection in the glabellar area as adjunctive treatment of depression. After 6 weeks, those who were treated had an average of 47% reduction in depression scores on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, compared with an average 9% reduction among those on placebo (J Psychiatr Res. 2012 May;46[5]:574-81). Two recent studies have had similar results, according to Dr. Rubin.

Results of another study, he said, raise the question of whether patients are less depressed because they are pleased with the cosmetic effects or if there is another explanation (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2016 Jan;74[1]:171-3.e1). The study, which included 59 patients with depression treated in the glabellar areas with botulinum toxin injections, found no association between severity of the furrows and degree of depression or between the degree of furrow correction and degree of relief from depression after treatment. “So the patients who had the most improvement were not necessarily the ones who were the least depressed afterwards,” he said.

These data imply that something else may be occurring that is not necessarily muscle related, he said.

Dr. Rubin said he had no relevant disclosures. SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

– The list of nontraditional uses for botulinum toxin type A includes facial flushing, menopausal hot flashes, and androgenetic alopecia, Mark Rubin, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Mark Rubin

There are data to support these uses, and there are data associating botulinum toxin treatment with improvement in depression, which suggest the effect may not be necessarily be related to improvement in appearance, said Dr. Rubin, who is in private practice in Beverly Hills, Calif., and is associate professor of dermatology at the University of California, San Diego.

Facial flushing: Very few people use botulinum toxin for facial flushing, but Dr. Rubin, who is among those who do not, described the data as “impressive.” Several trials, he noted, have found that very small doses can significantly reduce the amount of facial erythema, including an average 45% reduction after 60 days in one trial of 24 women (Acta Med Iran. 2016 Jul;54[7]:454-7).

In another study of 25 patients with facial erythema related to rosacea who were treated with 14-45 units intradermally to the nasal tip, bridge, and alae, there were statistically significant improvements in erythema 1, 2, and 3 months after treatment among the 15 with complete data (Dermatol Surg. 2015 Jan;41 Suppl 1:S9-16).

“If you’re using very small doses and they’re intradermal, there really is minimal risk you’re going to have a problem by inadvertently affecting musculature” in these patients, Dr. Rubin commented.

In another study of 9 patients with rosacea, treatment with incobotulinumtoxinA was associated with a significant reduction in erythema, papules, pustules, and telangiectasias, up to 15 weeks, compared with saline. The treatment patients also experienced less burning and stinging that did those who received saline (J Drugs Dermatol. 2017 Jun 1;16[6]:549-54.)

Menopausal hot flashes: Dr. Rubin described one study of 60 patients with severe hot flashes that compared saline with botulinum toxin, injected in 40 sites (2 units per site), including the neck, hairline, scalp, and chest. At 60 days’ follow-up, those treated with botulinum toxin had a significant reduction in sweating and in the number and severity of hot flashes; these women also had improved mood in terms of depression and irritability (Dermatol Surg. 2011 Nov;37[11]:1579-83).

Androgenetic alopecia: In a 60-week study of 50 men with androgenetic alopecia (Hamilton ratings of II-IV), 150 units of botulinum toxin A was injected into the scalp muscles (temporalis, frontalis, periauricular, and occipital), and repeated 6 months later (Plast Reconstr Surg. 2010 Nov;126[5]:246e-8e). Among the 40 patients who completed the trial, 75% had a response, and from baseline to 48 weeks, there was an 18% increase in mean hair counts in a 2 cm area, and a“profound” 39% reduction in hair loss (as measured by hair counts on the pillow in the morning), Dr. Rubin noted.

“Presumably, this is because if you’re relaxing the scalp muscles you’re getting increased blood flow into the scalp,” including increased oxygenation, which decreases the conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone and increases the conversion of testosterone to estradiol, he said.

In another study, 8 of 10 patients with androgenic alopecia has “good to excellent” results 24 weeks after botulinum toxin injections with 5 units per site at 30 sites. Referring to the increasing popularity of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections for male pattern alopecia, Dr. Rubin said that in his opinion “PRP certainly doesn’t do any better” than botulinum toxin for male pattern alopecia and is a much more involved injection, “so this is definitely something worth considering if you have more people coming into your practice thinking about injections for male pattern alopecia.”

Pore size and sebum production: A 2019 review of published studies of botulinum toxin A looking at the effect on sebum and pore size, Dr. Rubin said, found that most studies “suggest it does actually reduce pore size and sebum production” (J Cosmet Dermatol. 2019 Apr;18[2]:451-7).

This can be considered an option for those patients concerned about pore size, who are not satisfied with results of retinoid or laser treatment, he commented. This approach may not have an effect in all patients, so he advised first treating a small trial area, and photographing patients to record their level of improvement. “It’s rarely profound, but it’s additive, it’s one more thing you can do.”

Depression: These data include a study of 30 patients with major depression, half who received one onabotulinumtoxinA injection in the glabellar area as adjunctive treatment of depression. After 6 weeks, those who were treated had an average of 47% reduction in depression scores on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, compared with an average 9% reduction among those on placebo (J Psychiatr Res. 2012 May;46[5]:574-81). Two recent studies have had similar results, according to Dr. Rubin.

Results of another study, he said, raise the question of whether patients are less depressed because they are pleased with the cosmetic effects or if there is another explanation (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2016 Jan;74[1]:171-3.e1). The study, which included 59 patients with depression treated in the glabellar areas with botulinum toxin injections, found no association between severity of the furrows and degree of depression or between the degree of furrow correction and degree of relief from depression after treatment. “So the patients who had the most improvement were not necessarily the ones who were the least depressed afterwards,” he said.

These data imply that something else may be occurring that is not necessarily muscle related, he said.

Dr. Rubin said he had no relevant disclosures. SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Avoid ‘mutant selection window’ when prescribing antibiotics for acne

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Consider the “mutant selection window” to reduce antibiotic resistance when treating acne, Hilary E. Baldwin, MD, advised at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Hilary Baldwin

Dermatologists continue to write a disproportionate number of prescriptions for antibiotics, particularly tetracyclines, noted Dr. Baldwin, medical director of the Acne Treatment and Research Center in New York. In addition to limiting unnecessary use of antimicrobials, strategies for slowing antimicrobial resistance include using anti-inflammatory doses of doxycycline; using more retinoids, isotretinoin, spironolactone, and oral contraceptives; and improving patient compliance with treatment.

Dermatologists can also “pay attention to the bug we are treating and ... make sure the concentration of the drug that we are using is appropriate to the bug we’re trying to kill,” while also targeting resistant organisms. Dr. Baldwin referred to a paper in the infectious disease literature titled: “The mutant selection window and antimicrobial resistance,” which points out that a drug concentration range exists for which mutant strains of bacteria are selected most frequently (J Antimicrob Chemother. 2003 Jul;52[1]:11-7). The dimensions of this range, or “window,” are characteristic of each pathogen-antimicrobial combination. A high enough drug concentration will eliminate both resistant and sensitive strains of the pathogen.

The paper notes that the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) is the lowest concentration that will inhibit the visible growth of a microorganism. The mutant prevention concentration (MPC) is the minimum drug concentration needed to prevent the growth of resistant strains, Dr. Baldwin said. The mutant selection window is the concentration range that extends from the MIC up to the MPC, the range “within which resistant mutants are likely to emerge.” If the antimicrobial concentration falls within this window, a mutant strain is likely to develop and “you’re going to add to the problem of antibiotic resistance,” she explained. “So the goal is to treat low or to treat high, but not right in the middle.”

“This is not theoretical,” and has been shown over and over again, with, for example, Streptococcus pneumonia and moxifloxacin, she said (J Antimicrob Chemother. 2003 Oct;52[4]:616-22.).

When the therapeutic window does not extend all the way to the MPC, “toxicity starts to kick in before you can get high enough to kill off the whole group of organisms,” in which case a low-dose strategy would reduce the development of resistant organisms, she noted.

“We’re doing this already,” with topical antifungals, Dr. Baldwin pointed out, asking when the last time anyone heard that a fungus developed resistance to topical antifungal therapy. “Never, because we use our antifungals in such a high dose, that we’re 500 times the MPC.”

Using an anti-inflammatory dose of doxycycline for treating acne or rosacea is a low-dose strategy, and the 40-mg delayed-release dose stays “way below” the antimicrobial threshold, she said, but the 50-mg dose falls “right in the middle of that mutant selection window.”

As more treatments become available, it will be important to determine how to dose topical antibiotics so that they do not fall within the mutant selection window and avoid what happened with clindamycin and erythromycin, “where the topical use of these medications led to the development of resistance such that they no longer work for the treatment” of Cutibacterium acnes.

Dr. Baldwin disclosures included being on the speakers bureau, serving as an advisor, and/or an investigator for companies that include Almirall, BioPharmx, Foamix, Galderma, Ortho Dermatologics, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and La Roche–Posay.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Consider the “mutant selection window” to reduce antibiotic resistance when treating acne, Hilary E. Baldwin, MD, advised at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Hilary Baldwin

Dermatologists continue to write a disproportionate number of prescriptions for antibiotics, particularly tetracyclines, noted Dr. Baldwin, medical director of the Acne Treatment and Research Center in New York. In addition to limiting unnecessary use of antimicrobials, strategies for slowing antimicrobial resistance include using anti-inflammatory doses of doxycycline; using more retinoids, isotretinoin, spironolactone, and oral contraceptives; and improving patient compliance with treatment.

Dermatologists can also “pay attention to the bug we are treating and ... make sure the concentration of the drug that we are using is appropriate to the bug we’re trying to kill,” while also targeting resistant organisms. Dr. Baldwin referred to a paper in the infectious disease literature titled: “The mutant selection window and antimicrobial resistance,” which points out that a drug concentration range exists for which mutant strains of bacteria are selected most frequently (J Antimicrob Chemother. 2003 Jul;52[1]:11-7). The dimensions of this range, or “window,” are characteristic of each pathogen-antimicrobial combination. A high enough drug concentration will eliminate both resistant and sensitive strains of the pathogen.

The paper notes that the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) is the lowest concentration that will inhibit the visible growth of a microorganism. The mutant prevention concentration (MPC) is the minimum drug concentration needed to prevent the growth of resistant strains, Dr. Baldwin said. The mutant selection window is the concentration range that extends from the MIC up to the MPC, the range “within which resistant mutants are likely to emerge.” If the antimicrobial concentration falls within this window, a mutant strain is likely to develop and “you’re going to add to the problem of antibiotic resistance,” she explained. “So the goal is to treat low or to treat high, but not right in the middle.”

“This is not theoretical,” and has been shown over and over again, with, for example, Streptococcus pneumonia and moxifloxacin, she said (J Antimicrob Chemother. 2003 Oct;52[4]:616-22.).

When the therapeutic window does not extend all the way to the MPC, “toxicity starts to kick in before you can get high enough to kill off the whole group of organisms,” in which case a low-dose strategy would reduce the development of resistant organisms, she noted.

“We’re doing this already,” with topical antifungals, Dr. Baldwin pointed out, asking when the last time anyone heard that a fungus developed resistance to topical antifungal therapy. “Never, because we use our antifungals in such a high dose, that we’re 500 times the MPC.”

Using an anti-inflammatory dose of doxycycline for treating acne or rosacea is a low-dose strategy, and the 40-mg delayed-release dose stays “way below” the antimicrobial threshold, she said, but the 50-mg dose falls “right in the middle of that mutant selection window.”

As more treatments become available, it will be important to determine how to dose topical antibiotics so that they do not fall within the mutant selection window and avoid what happened with clindamycin and erythromycin, “where the topical use of these medications led to the development of resistance such that they no longer work for the treatment” of Cutibacterium acnes.

Dr. Baldwin disclosures included being on the speakers bureau, serving as an advisor, and/or an investigator for companies that include Almirall, BioPharmx, Foamix, Galderma, Ortho Dermatologics, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and La Roche–Posay.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

LAHAINA, HAWAII – Consider the “mutant selection window” to reduce antibiotic resistance when treating acne, Hilary E. Baldwin, MD, advised at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

Dr. Hilary Baldwin

Dermatologists continue to write a disproportionate number of prescriptions for antibiotics, particularly tetracyclines, noted Dr. Baldwin, medical director of the Acne Treatment and Research Center in New York. In addition to limiting unnecessary use of antimicrobials, strategies for slowing antimicrobial resistance include using anti-inflammatory doses of doxycycline; using more retinoids, isotretinoin, spironolactone, and oral contraceptives; and improving patient compliance with treatment.

Dermatologists can also “pay attention to the bug we are treating and ... make sure the concentration of the drug that we are using is appropriate to the bug we’re trying to kill,” while also targeting resistant organisms. Dr. Baldwin referred to a paper in the infectious disease literature titled: “The mutant selection window and antimicrobial resistance,” which points out that a drug concentration range exists for which mutant strains of bacteria are selected most frequently (J Antimicrob Chemother. 2003 Jul;52[1]:11-7). The dimensions of this range, or “window,” are characteristic of each pathogen-antimicrobial combination. A high enough drug concentration will eliminate both resistant and sensitive strains of the pathogen.

The paper notes that the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) is the lowest concentration that will inhibit the visible growth of a microorganism. The mutant prevention concentration (MPC) is the minimum drug concentration needed to prevent the growth of resistant strains, Dr. Baldwin said. The mutant selection window is the concentration range that extends from the MIC up to the MPC, the range “within which resistant mutants are likely to emerge.” If the antimicrobial concentration falls within this window, a mutant strain is likely to develop and “you’re going to add to the problem of antibiotic resistance,” she explained. “So the goal is to treat low or to treat high, but not right in the middle.”

“This is not theoretical,” and has been shown over and over again, with, for example, Streptococcus pneumonia and moxifloxacin, she said (J Antimicrob Chemother. 2003 Oct;52[4]:616-22.).

When the therapeutic window does not extend all the way to the MPC, “toxicity starts to kick in before you can get high enough to kill off the whole group of organisms,” in which case a low-dose strategy would reduce the development of resistant organisms, she noted.

“We’re doing this already,” with topical antifungals, Dr. Baldwin pointed out, asking when the last time anyone heard that a fungus developed resistance to topical antifungal therapy. “Never, because we use our antifungals in such a high dose, that we’re 500 times the MPC.”

Using an anti-inflammatory dose of doxycycline for treating acne or rosacea is a low-dose strategy, and the 40-mg delayed-release dose stays “way below” the antimicrobial threshold, she said, but the 50-mg dose falls “right in the middle of that mutant selection window.”

As more treatments become available, it will be important to determine how to dose topical antibiotics so that they do not fall within the mutant selection window and avoid what happened with clindamycin and erythromycin, “where the topical use of these medications led to the development of resistance such that they no longer work for the treatment” of Cutibacterium acnes.

Dr. Baldwin disclosures included being on the speakers bureau, serving as an advisor, and/or an investigator for companies that include Almirall, BioPharmx, Foamix, Galderma, Ortho Dermatologics, Sun Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and La Roche–Posay.

SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

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Hyperhidrosis treatment options include glycopyrrolate

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Hyperhidrosis affects nearly 5% of the U.S. population, and in a survey of U.S. teenagers, about 17% reported excessive sweating, Jashin Wu, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by the Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

In an interview with MDedge reporter Bruce Jancin, Dr. Wu, founder of the Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, Calif., discussed the off-label use of oral agents to treat hyperhidrosis. Dr. Wu said he is a fan of oral glycopyrrolate in particular, which he tends to use even earlier than suggested in the International Hyperhidrosis Society guidelines.

Glycopyrrolate is available in 1 mg and 2 mg tablets; Dr. Wu starts patients at a dose of 1 mg twice a day, escalating by 1 mg per week until the “desired effects occur” or the patient has problems tolerating treatment because of side effects.

Other oral options include oxybutynin and propranolol. Sofpironium bromide, an analog of glycopyrrolate, is in the pipeline, he said.

During the interview, Dr. Wu discussed mydriasis, an adverse effect associated with both topical and systemic anticholinergic treatment. In the two pivotal phase 3 randomized trials of prescription glycopyrronium cloth (Qbrexza) for axillary hyperhidrosis, the incidence of mydriasis was 6.8% in 463 patients on active treatment for 4 weeks. Three-quarters of cases were unilateral. The mydriasis resolved without permanent treatment discontinuation in 27 of the 31 patients (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019 Jan;80[1]:128-138.e2).

“The most important point is that patients need to be educated that they need to wash their hands very well after they apply it to the affected areas” to prevent accidental medication contact with the eyes, he advised.

Alarm bells can go off when a patient with anticholinergic therapy–induced mydriasis presents to an ED without mentioning their treatment status, Dr. Wu observed.

Dr. Wu had no relevant disclosures. SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click the play button below.

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LAHAINA, HAWAII – Hyperhidrosis affects nearly 5% of the U.S. population, and in a survey of U.S. teenagers, about 17% reported excessive sweating, Jashin Wu, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by the Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

In an interview with MDedge reporter Bruce Jancin, Dr. Wu, founder of the Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, Calif., discussed the off-label use of oral agents to treat hyperhidrosis. Dr. Wu said he is a fan of oral glycopyrrolate in particular, which he tends to use even earlier than suggested in the International Hyperhidrosis Society guidelines.

Glycopyrrolate is available in 1 mg and 2 mg tablets; Dr. Wu starts patients at a dose of 1 mg twice a day, escalating by 1 mg per week until the “desired effects occur” or the patient has problems tolerating treatment because of side effects.

Other oral options include oxybutynin and propranolol. Sofpironium bromide, an analog of glycopyrrolate, is in the pipeline, he said.

During the interview, Dr. Wu discussed mydriasis, an adverse effect associated with both topical and systemic anticholinergic treatment. In the two pivotal phase 3 randomized trials of prescription glycopyrronium cloth (Qbrexza) for axillary hyperhidrosis, the incidence of mydriasis was 6.8% in 463 patients on active treatment for 4 weeks. Three-quarters of cases were unilateral. The mydriasis resolved without permanent treatment discontinuation in 27 of the 31 patients (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019 Jan;80[1]:128-138.e2).

“The most important point is that patients need to be educated that they need to wash their hands very well after they apply it to the affected areas” to prevent accidental medication contact with the eyes, he advised.

Alarm bells can go off when a patient with anticholinergic therapy–induced mydriasis presents to an ED without mentioning their treatment status, Dr. Wu observed.

Dr. Wu had no relevant disclosures. SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click the play button below.

LAHAINA, HAWAII – Hyperhidrosis affects nearly 5% of the U.S. population, and in a survey of U.S. teenagers, about 17% reported excessive sweating, Jashin Wu, MD, said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar provided by the Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation.

In an interview with MDedge reporter Bruce Jancin, Dr. Wu, founder of the Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, Calif., discussed the off-label use of oral agents to treat hyperhidrosis. Dr. Wu said he is a fan of oral glycopyrrolate in particular, which he tends to use even earlier than suggested in the International Hyperhidrosis Society guidelines.

Glycopyrrolate is available in 1 mg and 2 mg tablets; Dr. Wu starts patients at a dose of 1 mg twice a day, escalating by 1 mg per week until the “desired effects occur” or the patient has problems tolerating treatment because of side effects.

Other oral options include oxybutynin and propranolol. Sofpironium bromide, an analog of glycopyrrolate, is in the pipeline, he said.

During the interview, Dr. Wu discussed mydriasis, an adverse effect associated with both topical and systemic anticholinergic treatment. In the two pivotal phase 3 randomized trials of prescription glycopyrronium cloth (Qbrexza) for axillary hyperhidrosis, the incidence of mydriasis was 6.8% in 463 patients on active treatment for 4 weeks. Three-quarters of cases were unilateral. The mydriasis resolved without permanent treatment discontinuation in 27 of the 31 patients (J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019 Jan;80[1]:128-138.e2).

“The most important point is that patients need to be educated that they need to wash their hands very well after they apply it to the affected areas” to prevent accidental medication contact with the eyes, he advised.

Alarm bells can go off when a patient with anticholinergic therapy–induced mydriasis presents to an ED without mentioning their treatment status, Dr. Wu observed.

Dr. Wu had no relevant disclosures. SDEF/Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

To listen to the interview, click the play button below.

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Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar kicks off on Thursday

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The annual Skin Disease Education Foundation’s Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar gets underway Thursday and will feature presentations on topics ranging from updates on acne, hyperhidrosis, and rosacea, to pigmentation disorders and connective tissue disease. The annual Psoriasis Forum at the meeting will feature talks on tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and interleukin-17 inhibitors, as well as presentations on phototherapy, emerging treatments, and IL-12/23 and IL-23 inhibitors. The Atopic Dermatology Forum will address new horizons in treatment, pediatric inflammatory disease, and the pathophysiology of atopic dermatitis.

The meeting wraps up on Saturday, with a slate of aesthetic dermatology presentations, kicking off with “Assessment of the Aging Face” and ending with “An Overview of Tissue-Tightening Devices.”

New this year is the Cutaneous Malignancies Forum, which is being held today, one day before the regular Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar program begins. With a focus on contemporary issues in effective diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous malignancies, the forum is cochaired by Sancy Leachman, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the department of dermatology, and the John D. Gray endowed chair in melanoma research, at Oregon Health & Science Center, Portland, and Mohammed Kashani-Sabet, MD, director of the Center for Melanoma Research and Treatment, at the California Pacific Medical Research Institute, San Francisco. The forum will feature four sessions: melanoma, keratinocyte carcinomas, cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and Merkel cell carcinoma.

SDEF and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. For full coverage, go to www.mdedge.com/dermatology.
 

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The annual Skin Disease Education Foundation’s Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar gets underway Thursday and will feature presentations on topics ranging from updates on acne, hyperhidrosis, and rosacea, to pigmentation disorders and connective tissue disease. The annual Psoriasis Forum at the meeting will feature talks on tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and interleukin-17 inhibitors, as well as presentations on phototherapy, emerging treatments, and IL-12/23 and IL-23 inhibitors. The Atopic Dermatology Forum will address new horizons in treatment, pediatric inflammatory disease, and the pathophysiology of atopic dermatitis.

The meeting wraps up on Saturday, with a slate of aesthetic dermatology presentations, kicking off with “Assessment of the Aging Face” and ending with “An Overview of Tissue-Tightening Devices.”

New this year is the Cutaneous Malignancies Forum, which is being held today, one day before the regular Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar program begins. With a focus on contemporary issues in effective diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous malignancies, the forum is cochaired by Sancy Leachman, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the department of dermatology, and the John D. Gray endowed chair in melanoma research, at Oregon Health & Science Center, Portland, and Mohammed Kashani-Sabet, MD, director of the Center for Melanoma Research and Treatment, at the California Pacific Medical Research Institute, San Francisco. The forum will feature four sessions: melanoma, keratinocyte carcinomas, cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and Merkel cell carcinoma.

SDEF and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. For full coverage, go to www.mdedge.com/dermatology.
 

The annual Skin Disease Education Foundation’s Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar gets underway Thursday and will feature presentations on topics ranging from updates on acne, hyperhidrosis, and rosacea, to pigmentation disorders and connective tissue disease. The annual Psoriasis Forum at the meeting will feature talks on tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and interleukin-17 inhibitors, as well as presentations on phototherapy, emerging treatments, and IL-12/23 and IL-23 inhibitors. The Atopic Dermatology Forum will address new horizons in treatment, pediatric inflammatory disease, and the pathophysiology of atopic dermatitis.

The meeting wraps up on Saturday, with a slate of aesthetic dermatology presentations, kicking off with “Assessment of the Aging Face” and ending with “An Overview of Tissue-Tightening Devices.”

New this year is the Cutaneous Malignancies Forum, which is being held today, one day before the regular Las Vegas Dermatology Seminar program begins. With a focus on contemporary issues in effective diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous malignancies, the forum is cochaired by Sancy Leachman, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the department of dermatology, and the John D. Gray endowed chair in melanoma research, at Oregon Health & Science Center, Portland, and Mohammed Kashani-Sabet, MD, director of the Center for Melanoma Research and Treatment, at the California Pacific Medical Research Institute, San Francisco. The forum will feature four sessions: melanoma, keratinocyte carcinomas, cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and Merkel cell carcinoma.

SDEF and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. For full coverage, go to www.mdedge.com/dermatology.
 

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