ADVERTISEMENT

Monitoring Acne Patients on Oral Therapy: Survey of the Editorial Board

Leading dermatologists from the Cutis and Dermatology News Editorial Boards answered 5 questions on monitoring acne patients on oral therapy. See what they’re recommending for their patients and why.

More Tips From Dermatologists

The dermatologists we polled had the following advice for their peers:

I see lab monitoring as an opportunity to engage patients and families in co-directing their care (ie, practice patient- and family-centered care). Some families and patients like frequent monitoring and some want as few blood draws as possible. I do my best to make sure the decision includes components of the patients’ preferences, medical evidence and my best clinical judgement.—Craig Burkhart, MD, MS, MPH (Chapel Hill, North Caroline)

Being familiar with and following the standard of care guidelines for the individual oral therapies used in the treatment of acne is very important. However, it is equally as important to assure the individual patient (medical history, physical examination, social history, etc) is taken into consideration to determine if additional monitoring is required.—Fran E. Cook-Bolden, MD (New York, New York)

,

The trend seems to be towards less routine monitoring other than pregnancy. Baseline tests may pick out the occasional patient with comorbidities that would preclude or delay treatment, but the majority of patients may not need the repetitive and costly testing that we have done in the past.—Richard Glogau, MD (San Francisco, California)
I have loosened my lab monitoring with isotretinoin over the past few years. If a patient has normal lipid values, comprehensive panel and complete blood cell count for the first 3 months of tests, I skip labs until the end of therapy.—Lawrence J. Green, MD (Washington, DC)

Interestingly, we focus quite a bit of attention on the risk of pregnancy with isotretinoin, and often don't focus enough on the risk with spironolactone. In our practice, we are careful to warn the patients on spironolactone about pregnancy prevention.—Stephen Stone, MD (Springfield, Illinois)

About This Survey

The survey was fielded electronically to Cutis and Dermatology News Editorial Board Members within the United States from May 5, 2019, to June 23, 2019. A total of 40 usable responses were received.