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Histological effects of tazarotene 0.1% cream vs. vehicle on photodamaged skin: a 6-month, multicentre, double-blind, randomized, vehicle-controlled study in patients with photodamaged facial skin.

Author: Machtinger LA, Kaidbey K, Lim J, Loven KH, Rist TE, Wilson DC, Parizadeh DD, Sefton J, Holland JM, Walker PS

Author affiliation: University of California-Irvine and South Coast Medical Center, Laguna Beach, CA, USA.

Publication date & source: 2004.12, Br J Dermatol., 151(6):1245-52.

Publication type: Clinical Trial; Multicenter Study; Randomized Controlled Trial

BACKGROUND: Topical tazarotene has been shown to offer efficacy in ameliorating multiple effects of photodamage. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the histological effects of tazarotene cream on photodamaged skin. METHODS: In this multicentre, double-blind, randomized, vehicle-controlled study, 50 patients with photodamaged facial skin (at least mild fine wrinkling and mottled hyperpigmentation, with at least one of these being moderate) were randomized to apply tazarotene 0.1% cream or vehicle cream to their face, once daily for 24 weeks. RESULTS: Blinded assessments showed that tazarotene was less likely than vehicle to be associated with an increase in keratinocytic and melanocytic atypia, and more likely than vehicle to be associated with a reduction in atypia. Between-group comparisons in distribution of change from baseline categories of severity were in favour of tazarotene (P = 0.055 for keratinocytic atypia, P = 0.034 for melanocytic atypia, and P < 0.001 for the number of granular cell layers). Compared with vehicle, tazarotene was associated with an increase in epidermal polarity (P = 0.008) and epidermal thickness (P = 0.012), and a tendency for stratum corneum compaction. Tazarotene was also associated with widened intercellular spaces (reported as epidermal oedema) relative to vehicle (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Treatment of photodamaged skin with tazarotene is associated with an amelioration of keratinocytic and melanocytic atypia, an improvement in epidermal polarity, and an increase in epidermal thickness.



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