📄 Extracted Text (453 words)
From: ICaryna Shuliak
To: Karina Shuliak
Subject: Rosacea treatment shifts focus I Dermatology Times
Date: Wed, 07 Dec 2016 06:15:09 +0000
http://dermatologytimes.modemmedicine.comidermatology-times/newskosacea-treatment-shifts-focus?page=0,0
Rosacea treatment shifts focus
Rosacea has always been challenging to treat, but continued research of late has forged a
better understanding of the potential pathogeneses of the disease, with the common
denominator appearing to be inflammation. Although more work needs to be done, this
relatively new insight into rosacea has already opened the door for novel effective therapeutic
approaches, bringing much needed relief to rosacea patients.
Read: Rosacea's surprising genetic link
Much has been learned over the past decade about rosacea, but perhaps one of the most
important pieces of the rosacea puzzle is that it is now understood to be a chronic
inflammatory disorder; as such, the focus of treatment options has slowly shifted towards the
anti-inflammatory and away from the antibiotic approach.
"We now know that rosacea is not an infectious disorder but a chronic inflammatory disorder,
all of which leads to the concept that antibiotics are not the right way to go about treating it,"
says Hilary E. Baldwin, M.D., Department of Dermatology, SUNY Downstate Medical
Center, Brooklyn, New York.
Although antibiotics are effective in the treatment of rosacea, they work by being anti-
inflammatory agents. When full dose antibiotic agents are used, Dr. Baldwin says that more
harm is ultimately caused than good, including the potential development of antibiotic
resistances. According to Dr. Baldwin, the tetracycline class of antibiotics frequently used in
rosacea is, in fact, a very good anti-inflammatory drug and in order to maximize the anti-
inflammatory effect, lower doses of the antibiotic should be used.
EFTA00566667
"Recognizing that doxycycline has both anti-inflammatory and antibiotic capacities, we
started playing around with anti-inflammatory dose doxycycline for the treatment of rosacea,
and found a dose that was low enough not to be an antibiotic but high enough to impart a full
anti-inflammatory ability. This was in part a kind of verification that rosacea indeed was a
chronic inflammatory disease where there was an up-regulation of cathelicidins and matrix
metalloproteinases in the epidermis that were suppressed by doxycycline," Dr. Baldwin says.
Recommended: Facial erythema influences perceptions
There is an acute difference however between doxycycline (Oracea, Galderma), which is
40mg of doxycycline in a controlled dosing manner (and an anti-inflammatory dose), and
low-dose antibiotics. At 40mg, doxycycline does not have antibiotic capabilities and therefore
is not an antibiotic but instead an anti-inflammatory drug. According to Dr. Baldwin,
50mg/day doxycycline or minocycline, although effective in rosacea, are antibiotic doses, and
low-dose at that. Antibiotic resistance is encouraged by inadequate dosing with antibiotics.
Therefore, one could argue that 200mg/day is a less harmful dose than 50mg/day.
NEXT: Causes of inflammation
EFTA00566668
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
6fbbd34b96e56c1c4f53285886ebc08e1a81fe55ff5b2a1a9051ce55c502be04
Bates Number
EFTA00566667
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
2
Comments 0