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No matter which treatment regimen is recommended for patients with acne, it should always include a topical retinoid, according to dermatologist Hilary Baldwin, MD.

Patients with successfully treated acne typically use an average of 2.53 different medications, Baldwin, director of the Acne Treatment & Research Center, Brooklyn, New York, said at the Society of Dermatology Physician Associates (SDPA) 22nd Annual Fall Dermatology Conference.

 

Dr. Hilary E. Baldwin

“Combination treatment is the name of the game, but how do we convince our patients that what we chose is carefully orchestrated?” she said. “Combination therapy is much more effective, yet we’re always told, ‘keep it simple.’ The trick is to use combination products that have two or three medications in them — fixed combinations and products with excellent vehicles.”

No matter what treatment regimen is recommended for patients with acne, she continued, it should always include a topical retinoid. Tretinoin was the first topical retinoid approved for acne treatment in 1971, followed by adapalene in 1996, tazarotene in 1997, and trifarotene in 2019. According to a review article , topical retinoids inhibit the formation of microcomedones, reduce mature comedones and inflammatory lesions, enhance penetration of other drugs, reduce and prevent scarring, reduce hyperpigmentation, and maintain remission of acne.

More recently, authors of the 2024 American Academy of Dermatology guidelines of care for the management of acne vulgaris strongly recommended the use of topical retinoids based on moderate certainty evidence in the medial literature. Strong recommendations are also made for benzoyl peroxide, topical antibiotics, and oral doxycycline.

Baldwin noted that the benefits of retinoids include their comedolytic and anti-comedogenic properties, their effectiveness in treating inflammatory lesions, and their suitability for long-term maintenance. However, their drawbacks involve the potential for irritancy, which can be concentration- and vehicle-dependent.

Irritancy “maxes out at 1-2 weeks, but the problem is you lose the patient at 2 weeks unless they know it’s coming,” she said, noting that she once heard the 2-week mark characterized as a “crisis of confidence.” Patients “came in with a bunch of pimples, and now they’re red and flaky and burning and stinging [from the retinoid], yet they still have pimples,” Baldwin said. “You really need to talk them through that 2-week mark [or] they’re going to stop the medication.”

To improve retinoid tolerability, Baldwin offered the following tips:

  • Use a pea-sized amount for the entire affected area and avoid spot treatments.
  • Start with every other day application.
  • Moisturize regularly, possibly applying moisturizer before the retinoid.
  • Consider switching to a different formulation with an alternative vehicle or retinoid delivery system. Adapalene and tazarotene are the only retinoids that have proven to be stable in the presence of benzoyl peroxide, she said.
  • Be persistent. “There is no such thing as a patient who cannot tolerate a retinoid,” said Baldwin, the lead author of a review on the evolution of topical retinoids for acne. “It’s because of a provider who failed to provide a sufficient amount of information to allow the patient to eventually be able to tolerate a retinoid.”

Baldwin also referred to an independent meta-analysis of 221 trials comparing the efficacy of pharmacological therapies for acne in patients of any age, which found that the percentage reduction in total lesion count, compared with placebo, was the highest with oral isotretinoin (mean difference [MD], 48.41; P = 1.00), followed by triple therapy containing a topical antibiotic, a topical retinoid, and benzoyl peroxide (MD, 38.15; P = .95), and by triple therapy containing an oral antibiotic, a topical retinoid, and benzoyl peroxide (MD, 34.83; P = .90).

Baldwin is a former president of the American Acne & Rosacea Society and is the SDPA conference medical director. She disclosed being a speaker, consultant, and/or an advisory board member for Almirall, Arcutis, Bausch, Beiersdorf, Cutera, Galderma, Journey, Kenvue, La Roche-Posay, L’Oreal, Sanofi, Sun Pharma, and Tarsus Pharmaceuticals.

 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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No matter which treatment regimen is recommended for patients with acne, it should always include a topical retinoid, according to dermatologist Hilary Baldwin, MD.

Patients with successfully treated acne typically use an average of 2.53 different medications, Baldwin, director of the Acne Treatment & Research Center, Brooklyn, New York, said at the Society of Dermatology Physician Associates (SDPA) 22nd Annual Fall Dermatology Conference.

 

Dr. Hilary E. Baldwin

“Combination treatment is the name of the game, but how do we convince our patients that what we chose is carefully orchestrated?” she said. “Combination therapy is much more effective, yet we’re always told, ‘keep it simple.’ The trick is to use combination products that have two or three medications in them — fixed combinations and products with excellent vehicles.”

No matter what treatment regimen is recommended for patients with acne, she continued, it should always include a topical retinoid. Tretinoin was the first topical retinoid approved for acne treatment in 1971, followed by adapalene in 1996, tazarotene in 1997, and trifarotene in 2019. According to a review article , topical retinoids inhibit the formation of microcomedones, reduce mature comedones and inflammatory lesions, enhance penetration of other drugs, reduce and prevent scarring, reduce hyperpigmentation, and maintain remission of acne.

More recently, authors of the 2024 American Academy of Dermatology guidelines of care for the management of acne vulgaris strongly recommended the use of topical retinoids based on moderate certainty evidence in the medial literature. Strong recommendations are also made for benzoyl peroxide, topical antibiotics, and oral doxycycline.

Baldwin noted that the benefits of retinoids include their comedolytic and anti-comedogenic properties, their effectiveness in treating inflammatory lesions, and their suitability for long-term maintenance. However, their drawbacks involve the potential for irritancy, which can be concentration- and vehicle-dependent.

Irritancy “maxes out at 1-2 weeks, but the problem is you lose the patient at 2 weeks unless they know it’s coming,” she said, noting that she once heard the 2-week mark characterized as a “crisis of confidence.” Patients “came in with a bunch of pimples, and now they’re red and flaky and burning and stinging [from the retinoid], yet they still have pimples,” Baldwin said. “You really need to talk them through that 2-week mark [or] they’re going to stop the medication.”

To improve retinoid tolerability, Baldwin offered the following tips:

  • Use a pea-sized amount for the entire affected area and avoid spot treatments.
  • Start with every other day application.
  • Moisturize regularly, possibly applying moisturizer before the retinoid.
  • Consider switching to a different formulation with an alternative vehicle or retinoid delivery system. Adapalene and tazarotene are the only retinoids that have proven to be stable in the presence of benzoyl peroxide, she said.
  • Be persistent. “There is no such thing as a patient who cannot tolerate a retinoid,” said Baldwin, the lead author of a review on the evolution of topical retinoids for acne. “It’s because of a provider who failed to provide a sufficient amount of information to allow the patient to eventually be able to tolerate a retinoid.”

Baldwin also referred to an independent meta-analysis of 221 trials comparing the efficacy of pharmacological therapies for acne in patients of any age, which found that the percentage reduction in total lesion count, compared with placebo, was the highest with oral isotretinoin (mean difference [MD], 48.41; P = 1.00), followed by triple therapy containing a topical antibiotic, a topical retinoid, and benzoyl peroxide (MD, 38.15; P = .95), and by triple therapy containing an oral antibiotic, a topical retinoid, and benzoyl peroxide (MD, 34.83; P = .90).

Baldwin is a former president of the American Acne & Rosacea Society and is the SDPA conference medical director. She disclosed being a speaker, consultant, and/or an advisory board member for Almirall, Arcutis, Bausch, Beiersdorf, Cutera, Galderma, Journey, Kenvue, La Roche-Posay, L’Oreal, Sanofi, Sun Pharma, and Tarsus Pharmaceuticals.

 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

No matter which treatment regimen is recommended for patients with acne, it should always include a topical retinoid, according to dermatologist Hilary Baldwin, MD.

Patients with successfully treated acne typically use an average of 2.53 different medications, Baldwin, director of the Acne Treatment & Research Center, Brooklyn, New York, said at the Society of Dermatology Physician Associates (SDPA) 22nd Annual Fall Dermatology Conference.

 

Dr. Hilary E. Baldwin

“Combination treatment is the name of the game, but how do we convince our patients that what we chose is carefully orchestrated?” she said. “Combination therapy is much more effective, yet we’re always told, ‘keep it simple.’ The trick is to use combination products that have two or three medications in them — fixed combinations and products with excellent vehicles.”

No matter what treatment regimen is recommended for patients with acne, she continued, it should always include a topical retinoid. Tretinoin was the first topical retinoid approved for acne treatment in 1971, followed by adapalene in 1996, tazarotene in 1997, and trifarotene in 2019. According to a review article , topical retinoids inhibit the formation of microcomedones, reduce mature comedones and inflammatory lesions, enhance penetration of other drugs, reduce and prevent scarring, reduce hyperpigmentation, and maintain remission of acne.

More recently, authors of the 2024 American Academy of Dermatology guidelines of care for the management of acne vulgaris strongly recommended the use of topical retinoids based on moderate certainty evidence in the medial literature. Strong recommendations are also made for benzoyl peroxide, topical antibiotics, and oral doxycycline.

Baldwin noted that the benefits of retinoids include their comedolytic and anti-comedogenic properties, their effectiveness in treating inflammatory lesions, and their suitability for long-term maintenance. However, their drawbacks involve the potential for irritancy, which can be concentration- and vehicle-dependent.

Irritancy “maxes out at 1-2 weeks, but the problem is you lose the patient at 2 weeks unless they know it’s coming,” she said, noting that she once heard the 2-week mark characterized as a “crisis of confidence.” Patients “came in with a bunch of pimples, and now they’re red and flaky and burning and stinging [from the retinoid], yet they still have pimples,” Baldwin said. “You really need to talk them through that 2-week mark [or] they’re going to stop the medication.”

To improve retinoid tolerability, Baldwin offered the following tips:

  • Use a pea-sized amount for the entire affected area and avoid spot treatments.
  • Start with every other day application.
  • Moisturize regularly, possibly applying moisturizer before the retinoid.
  • Consider switching to a different formulation with an alternative vehicle or retinoid delivery system. Adapalene and tazarotene are the only retinoids that have proven to be stable in the presence of benzoyl peroxide, she said.
  • Be persistent. “There is no such thing as a patient who cannot tolerate a retinoid,” said Baldwin, the lead author of a review on the evolution of topical retinoids for acne. “It’s because of a provider who failed to provide a sufficient amount of information to allow the patient to eventually be able to tolerate a retinoid.”

Baldwin also referred to an independent meta-analysis of 221 trials comparing the efficacy of pharmacological therapies for acne in patients of any age, which found that the percentage reduction in total lesion count, compared with placebo, was the highest with oral isotretinoin (mean difference [MD], 48.41; P = 1.00), followed by triple therapy containing a topical antibiotic, a topical retinoid, and benzoyl peroxide (MD, 38.15; P = .95), and by triple therapy containing an oral antibiotic, a topical retinoid, and benzoyl peroxide (MD, 34.83; P = .90).

Baldwin is a former president of the American Acne & Rosacea Society and is the SDPA conference medical director. She disclosed being a speaker, consultant, and/or an advisory board member for Almirall, Arcutis, Bausch, Beiersdorf, Cutera, Galderma, Journey, Kenvue, La Roche-Posay, L’Oreal, Sanofi, Sun Pharma, and Tarsus Pharmaceuticals.

 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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