Title: ACNE
1ACNE
- Dr. Sandeep Rondla
- South Birmingham VTS
2Introduction
- Acne is a disease of pilosebaceous follicles
present on the face and the upper trunk and are
under androgenic control. - Affects most of the adolescent population, in 20
of these it is clinically significant - Both sexes involved, peak at 16 - 20 years
- In chronic disease, it persists till the mid 20s,
in 7 until 40-50 yrs. - Rare in infancy
3Aetiology
- 3 types of follicles in the skin hair (beard),
vellus and sebaceous - Acne involves sebaceous follicles - seen on face,
back and chest. - Factors in acne formation
- increased sebum production
- ductal hyperprolifertaion (comedone formation)
- colonisation of the duct with Propionibacterium
acnes - inflammation
- inflamation
4Increased sebum production
- Patients with acne produce more sebum than
controls - No evidence of significant hormonal
abnormalities, hence do not need investigation - Evidence suggests that acne is an end-organ
hyper-response of sebaceous glands to circulating
hormones - Androgens of adrenal and gonadal origin stimulate
sebum production
5comedone formation
- Comedone formation is the result of ductal
corneocytes accumulating in the ductal lumen. - Comedone present clinically as blackheads and
whiteheads - A whitehead is referred as a closed comedone as
it very small orifice with many proinflammatory
substances in the duct contents. - A black head is referred to as a open comedone
with large orifice. - Whiteheads are more prone to develop into
inflammatory lesions than blackheads. - Treatment should be aimed at reducing
microcomedones which usually precede these
lesions.Topical retinoids are the treatment of
choice. -
whitehead Vs blackhead
6comedone formation
7P.acnes
- Normal commensal of the skin, esp in sebum rich
areas - Infection occurs when there is colonisation of
the pilosebaceous duct with p. acne, usually
early after comedone formation - Exact mechanism of colonisation is not known
- Evidence suggests role of micro-environment in
acne prone glands
8inflammation
- Inflammation is type IV cell mediated immune
reaction - Specific antigen not identified
- In pustule stage polymorphonuclear leucocytes
- In intense papular stage giant cell response
with associated duct rupture - Inflammation leads to scarring due to loss of or
increase collagen
9clinical features
- Seborrhoea - greasiness
- Comedones
- Superficial inflamed lesions - papules, pustules,
macules - Deep inflamed lesions - nodules and deep pustules
- Scars
- Post inflammatory pigmentation
10acne grading
- MILD - Predominantly consists of non-inflammatory
comedones - MODERATE - Mixture of non-inflammatory comedones
and inflammatory papules and pustules - SEVERE - Presence of nodules and cysts along with
preponderance of inflammatory papules and
pustules
11differential diagnosis
- Perioral dermatitis
- Seborrhoeic eczema
- Rosacea
- Pomade acne
- Steroid induced acne
Pomade acne
12investigations
- Rarely needed
- Hormonal investigations to be done if hirsuitism
or very irregular menses (PCOD) - Erythromycin resistant P. acne seen in 65 and
tetracycline resistance seen in 20 - culture
might be useful - Patients on minocycline should have blood tests 6
monthly to check LFTs, ANF and pANCA - If starting on oral isoretinoin - liver enzymes
and lipids at baseline / 1 month after starting
treatment and every 3 months there after - Pregnancy test - pre therapy and 5 weeks post
therapy. Monthly pregnancy test recommended.
13treatment principles
- Discussion with patient
- Choice of Topical therapy
- Choice of Oral therapy
- Choice of Physical therapy
- Combined therapy
14discussion with the patient
- Time spent by the general practioner in
discussing acne with the patient should emphasise
the following - Acne is a chronic disease.
- A treatment strategy is needed and it is likely
that long therapy will be required. - Acne is a slow responding disorder with little
improvement in the first 3-5 weeks. - There is a need for continued compliance
- There is no evidence that fatty foods or
chocolate adversely affect acne. - Certain physiological events may influence
acne,for example stress may make acne worse - Premenstrual flare is common in 70 of females.
Sunshine often helps acne but often temporarily.
15topical therapy
- Mild disease
- Combination with oral antibiotics in moderate
disease - Combination with hormonal therapy in females
- Maintenance therapy after oral therapy has been
discontinued
16topical therapy
Anti-comedonal therapies benzoyl peroxide (mild impact)
Anti-comedonal therapies azelaic acid (mild impact)
Anti-comedonal therapies topical retinoids (significant impact)
Anti-inflammatory agents topical retinoids such as adapalene
Anti-inflammatory agents topical retinoids such as all-trans retinoic acid
Anti-inflammatory agents topical retinoids such as isotretinoin
Anti-inflammatory agents non-antibiotic antimicrobials such as benzoyl peroxide
Anti-inflammatory agents non-antibiotic antimicrobials such as azelaic acid
Anti-inflammatory agents antibiotics such as clindamycin
Anti-inflammatory agents antibiotics such as erythromycin
Anti-inflammatory agents antibiotics such as tetracycline
Anti-inflammatory agents combination therapy such as zinc erythromycin
Anti-inflammatory agents combination therapy such as benzoyl peroxide erythromycin (Benzamycin)
Anti-inflammatory agents combination therapy such as adapalene benzoyl peroxide Epiduo
Clindamycin and benzoyl peroxide (DUAC) isotretinion and erythromycin (isotrex)
Miscellaneous Nicotinamide
Miscellaneous Potent steroids for 4-5 days
17oral therapy
Drug Dosage Comments regarding usage Incidence of P. acne resistance Adverse effects
Oxytetracycline 500 mg BD inexpensive, taken 30 mins pre-food and not with milk moderate rare onycholysis, photosensitivity, BIH
Erythromycin 500 mg BD inexpensive, take on empty stomach high GI upset, nausea diarrhoea
Minocycline 100-200 mg daily expensive moderate and increasing headaches (dose related) pigmentary changes autoimmune hepatitis LE like syndrome
Doxycycline 100-200 mg daily moderate moderate photosensitivity (dose related)
Lymecycline 300-600 mg daily moderate as tetracycline less than minocycline
Trimethoprim 200-300 mg BD inexpensive moderate or low rarely hepatic or renal toxicity, aganulocytosis
18DIANETTE
- Dianette has a product license for severe acne
but is not licensed as an oral contraceptive in
the UK. - It achieves improvement in 75 - 90 of female
patients. - Relative risk of VTE is slightly higher compared
to other COC pills - Should be withdrawn 3 to 4 cycles after the acne
is clear - Once Acne is clear - low androgenic effect pill
like Marvelon , Cilest or Yasmin prescribed for
contraception rrequired
19treatment failure
- Wrong Diagnosis
- Compliance Problems - common problem. Must be
stressed to patient - P.acnes Resistance - increasing problem. Commonly
seen with Erythromycin Clindamycin
20referral guidelines to secondary care - NICE
- Patients who have severe physical disease.
- Patients who have moderate disease but have
failed to respond to 6 months of adequate oral
and topical therapy. - Patients in whom there are significant
psycho-social problems from acne. - Patients with significant problems with scarring
/ who may be at risk of scarring. - Patients suspected of significant hormonal
disease.
21treatment algorithm
Acne grade
Choice of treatment
Maintenance therapy
Topical retinoids /- Benzoyl peroxide / Topical
antibiotics
Mild acne (Comedones /- inflammatory lesions
Success
Failure
Combination therapy Oral Antibiotic Topical
retinoid /- Benzoyl peroxide
Success
Moderate acne (mild to moderate papular /
pustular)
Topical retinoids /- Benzoyl peroxide
Failure
Systemic isoretinoin /- Hormonal therapy
(females)
Success
Severe acne (severe nodulocystic)
22Thank You