Sm. Bulengoransby et al., TOPICAL TRETINOIN (RETINOIC ACID) THERAPY FOR HYPERPIGMENTED LESIONS CAUSED BY INFLAMMATION OF THE SKIN IN BLACK PATIENTS, The New England journal of medicine, 328(20), 1993, pp. 1438-1443
Background and Methods. Irregular disfiguring skin hyperpigmentation d
ue to inflammation may develop in black persons. We investigated the t
reatment of this hyperpigmentation with topical tretinoin (0.1 percent
retinoic acid cream). Fifty-four subjects completed a 40-week randomi
zed, double-blind, vehicle-controlled study. Twenty-four subjects appl
ied tretinoin daily to the face, arms, or both areas, and 30 subjects
applied vehicle cream. At base line and after 40 weeks of treatment, e
ach subject's postinflammatory hyperpigmented lesions and normal skin
were assessed by clinical and colorimetric evaluations and by analysis
of biopsy specimens. Results. The facial postinflammatory hyperpigmen
ted lesions of the tretinoin-treated subjects were significantly light
er after the 40 weeks of therapy than those of the vehicle-treated sub
jects (P<0.001); overall improvement was first noted after 4 weeks of
tretinoin treatment. At the end of treatment, colorimetry demonstrated
a 40 percent lightening of the lesions toward normal skin color in th
e 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 treti
noin 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 colorimet
ry (P<0.001). Retinoid dermatitis developed in 12 of the 24 tretinoin-
treated subjects who completed the study (50 percent) and in 1 tretino
in-treated subject who withdrew from the study, but diminished as the
study progressed. Conclusions. Topical application of tretinoin signif
icantly lightens postinflammatory hyperpigmentation; to a clinically m
inimal but statistically significant degree, it also lightens normal s
kin in black persons.