Literature DB >> 8479462

Topical tretinoin (retinoic acid) therapy for hyperpigmented lesions caused by inflammation of the skin in black patients.

S M Bulengo-Ransby1, C E Griffiths, C K Kimbrough-Green, L J Finkel, T A Hamilton, C N Ellis, J J Voorhees.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND METHODS: Irregular disfiguring skin hyperpigmentation due to inflammation may develop in black persons. We investigated the treatment of this hyperpigmentation with topical tretinoin (0.1 percent retinoic acid cream). Fifty-four subjects completed a 40-week randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled study. Twenty-four subjects applied tretinoin daily to the face, arms, or both areas, and 30 subjects applied vehicle cream. At base line and after 40 weeks of treatment, each subject's post-inflammatory hyperpigmented lesions and normal skin were assessed by clinical and colorimetric evaluations and by analysis of biopsy specimens.
RESULTS: The facial post-inflammatory hyperpigmented lesions of the tretinoin-treated subjects were significantly lighter after the 40 weeks of therapy than those of the vehicle-treated subjects (P < 0.001); overall improvement was first noted after four weeks of tretinoin treatment. At the end of treatment, colorimetry demonstrated a 40 percent lightening of the lesions toward normal skin color in the tretinoin-treated lesions, as compared with an 18 percent lightening in vehicle-treated lesions (P = 0.05). The epidermal melanin content in the lesions decreased by 23 percent with tretinoin and by 3 percent with vehicle (P = 0.24). Normal skin was minimally lightened by tretinoin as compared with vehicle, according to both clinical evaluation (0.1 vs. -0.1 unit change on an 8-point scale; P = 0.055) and colorimetry (P < 0.001). Retinoid dermatitis developed in 12 of the 24 tretinoin-treated subjects who completed the study (50 percent) and in 1 tretinoin-treated subject who withdrew from the study, but diminished as the study progressed.
CONCLUSIONS: Topical application of tretinoin significantly lightens post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation and, to a clinically minimal but statistically significant degree, lightens normal skin in black persons.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8479462     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM199305203282002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  15 in total

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