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Home NEWS Science News Health

Doctors urged to reconsider controversial acne drug

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
March 16, 2020
in Health
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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UC Riverside study calls for ‘interdisciplinary approach between psychology and dermatology for optimal acne treatment’

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Credit: University of California, Riverside


Acne treatment including the highly effective acne medication isotretinoin should be made more readily available despite reports of its association with depression and teen suicide. That’s the implication of a study just published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Isotretinoin has been linked to depression and suicide. But UCR researcher Misaki Natsuaki, one of the study’s authors, said severe acne itself, when left untreated, poses a serious risk for depression and anxiety.

Natsuaki’s research team conducted the first meta-analysis, analyzing 42 studies involving more than one million people, to resolve sometimes-conflicting data related to studies of how acne is related to depression and anxiety. The studies showed a significant association with acne and mental health.

“Acne may not cause physical pain or impairment, but you do not want to leave acne untreated because that’s a risk for mental health,” said Natsuaki, an associate professor of psychology and director of the UCR Developmental Transitions Laboratory. “Undertreatment of acne itself is related to depression and anxiety, especially in females.”

Isotretinoin, often referred to by the since-discontinued brand name Accutane, is an effective acne medication that hit the market in 1982. It can reduce the new acne after a standard six months treatment by reducing the size of oil glands and the amount of oil they produce, and making pores less hospitable to the Propionibacterium acnes bacteria. In up to 90% of cases, all or nearly all of acne is eliminated. Its brand names include Absorica, Claravis, Amnesteem, Myorisan, and Zenatane.

But in 1998, the Food and Drug Administration issued a warning to doctors regarding a possible association with depression, psychosis, suicidal ideation, and suicide. One estimate – not based on a study – attributed 10 suicides in 2019 to isotretinoin.

The anti-Accutane phenomena, and regulatory action, grew 20 years ago after a congressman attributed his son’s suicide to the medication. A subsequent suit was dismissed years later. In 2006, the FDA created the iPledge monitoring program, a risk management system specifically for Isotretinoin. With a goal of enforcing control over prescribing, dispensing, and using isotretinoin, the program requires all prescribers, pharmacists, and patients to register and log detailed information into the site.

Natsuaki’s meta-analysis found both depression and anxiety heightened in acne sufferers at an effect size similar to the ill effect of cyberbullying on victim’s depression, anxiety, and loneliness. Contrary to expectations, the researchers found that acne is associated with greater anxiety and depression among adults than adolescents.

“We speculate that, although no one likes to have acne on his or her face, the prevalence of acne is high in adolescent years and it’s somewhat expected to happen in teens,” Natsuaki said. “However, for adults, acne may appear as a deviation from social norm.”

The study also found the emotional cost of acne is higher in Middle Eastern regions, though that may have been impacted by the inclusion of a disproportionately high number of studies from countries including Turkey, Iran, and Egypt.

The study concludes: “Given the psychiatric risk of acne itself, it is important for clinicians to optimize acne management which may include utilization of isotretinoin.”

###

The paper is titled “Acne vulgaris and risk of depression and anxiety: A meta-analytic review. In addition to Natsuaki, researchers in the study include lead author Danielle V. Samuels, a lecturer at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a former student in Natsuaki’s lab; Robert Rosenthal, a UCR psychology professor; and Rick Lin and Soham Chaudhari, both dermatologists affiliated with the University of North Texas Health Science Center.

Media Contact
John Warren
[email protected]
951-827-4756

Related Journal Article

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaad.2020.02.040

Tags: Depression/AngerDermatologyMedicine/HealthMental HealthPediatricsStress/Anxiety
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