News

Women’s acne mirrors teen acne


 

FROM JEADV

References

The distribution of acne lesions in adults is similar to that in adolescents, based on data from a prospective study of 374 women aged 25 years and older.

“The stereotype of adult female acne being due to hormonal disturbances presenting as inflammatory acne localized only to the mandibular area was not found in the majority of this large group,” noted Dr. Brigitte Dreno of Nantes (France) University and colleagues.

Courtesy Wikimedia Commons/Kinan Ayu/ Creative Commons license

Approximately 90% of the women demonstrated facial acne severity typical to that seen in adolescents, with involvement of the cheeks, forehead, temples, and mandibular area, the researchers noted. The most common presentation was mixed facial acne, with both inflammatory and noninflammatory lesions. A total of 6% of women had inflammatory acne only, with no reported noninflammatory lesions, and 17% had comedonal acne and no reported inflammatory lesions.

“We recommend that the general treatment approach for adult acne should include agents that target each of the acne lesion subtypes,” the researchers wrote.

The findings were published in the Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (2015;29:1096-106 [doi:10.1111/jdv.12757]).

Recommended Reading

With menstrual acne flares, OCs and spironolactone boost effect of maintenance therapy
MDedge ObGyn
Adapalene/benzoyl peroxide gel improves acne in adult women
MDedge ObGyn
VIDEO: Sun protection urged for Asian, Hispanic women
MDedge ObGyn
KOH solution, AK treatment both improve genital warts
MDedge ObGyn
Acne gel works better in women
MDedge ObGyn
Racial disparities in HPV vaccine recommendations persist
MDedge ObGyn
Class of 2015: New drugs projected to earn billions and billions
MDedge ObGyn
AMWA: Recognizing human-trafficking victims
MDedge ObGyn
Overactive androgens probably don’t cause women’s severe acne
MDedge ObGyn
Nitric oxide treatment works for genital warts
MDedge ObGyn