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Halve Acne Lesion Counts in One Month

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EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM SDEF HAWAII DERMATOLOGY SEMINAR

WAIKOLOA, HAWAII – The fixed-dose combination of adapalene/benzoyl peroxide gel 0.1%/2.5% typically results in reductions of 40%-50% in inflammatory and 30%-40% in noninflammatory acne lesion counts during the first 4 weeks of therapy.

In a pooled analysis of 14 studies totaling 2,358 acne patients aged 9-61 years, the proportion with an Investigator’s Global Assessment (IGA) of moderate or severe acne dropped from 92% at baseline to 51% at 4 weeks, according to Dr. Linda Stein Gold.

Dr. Linda Stein Gold

The pooled analysis was carried out to provide physicians and patients with information as to what to realistically expect in the first 4 weeks of therapy. The analysis is particularly timely in light of the Food and Drug Administration’s recent expansion of the indication for adapalene/benzoyl peroxide gel 0.1%/2.5% (Epiduo) to include acne patients as young as 9 years of age, noted Dr. Stein Gold, director of clinical research in the department of dermatology at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit.

Mild skin irritation was common, especially in the first 2 weeks of use.

"It’s a fiction that retinoids are too harsh for younger patients to use," Dr. Stein Gold said. "I tell all my acne patients, especially the younger ones, no matter what topical retinoid they’re using, to use it every other night for the first 2 weeks, make sure their skin is completely dry, and use a gentle cleanser and a good moisturizer," she said at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar sponsored by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation. "If they get through those first 2 weeks, they’ll see that the tolerability really improves."

Dr. Stein Gold said she likes the fixed combination of adapalene/benzoyl peroxide gel 0.1%/2.5% because it combines several key elements of cutting-edge acne treatment. Topical retinoids are not mere comedone busters, as formerly thought, but are also effective agents for papules and pustular lesions. While they do not kill Propionibacterium acnes, they down-regulate Toll-like receptor 2, which is produced by the bacterium and induces proinflammatory cytokines. Topical retinoids are a key part of maintenance-of-remission strategies. And adapalene is unique among topical retinoids in that it is inherently stable with benzoyl peroxide (BPO) and is stable in daylight.

BPO is unique in that it has potent antibacterial activity, but never causes P. acnes resistance, even after many years of treatment. BPO is quite effective for inflammatory lesions and moderately effective for comedonal acne lesions, Dr. Stein Gold noted. Also, it is well established that BPO at a concentration of 2.5% is as efficacious as 5% or 10%, and much better tolerated than at the higher concentrations. The molecule size and the use of a vehicle with good penetration into the hair follicle are much more important factors in treatment effectiveness than is the BPO concentration, she added.

In one study of acne patients with antibiotic-resistant P. acnes, including clindamycin-, doxycycline-, erythromycin-, and minocycline-resistant microorganisms, 88% of the antibiotic-resistant P. acnes bacteria were killed after 2 weeks of treatment with adapalene/BPO gel 0.1%/2.5%. After 4 weeks of treatment, 97% of the antibiotic-resistant organisms were dead. That’s testimony to the P. acnes–killing power of BPO, said Dr. Stein Gold.

"There’s a sense among many that with all the newer medications we have for acne, benzoyl peroxide is really your grandfather’s treatment, with no place in today’s modern world. This is totally false. I really feel that benzoyl peroxide should play a central role in all of our acne patients’ treatment regimens, unless of course they’re allergic to it, which occurs in only a small percentage of our patients," she said.

The pooled analysis was funded by Galderma. Dr. Stein Gold is a consultant to Galderma, Stiefel, Medicis, and Warner Chilcott.

SDEF and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

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