Safety and Efficacy of Topically Applied Selected Cutibacterium acnes Strains over Five Weeks in Patients with Acne Vulgaris: An Open-label, Pilot Study

Authors

  • Ante Karoglan
  • Bernhard Paetzold
  • Joao Pereira De Lima
  • Holger Brüggemann
  • Thomas Tüting
  • Denny Schanze
  • Marc Güell
  • Harald Gollnick

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-3323

Keywords:

acne vulgaris, microbiome, skin

Abstract

Imbalance in skin microflora, particularly related to certain Cutibacterium acnes strains, may trigger acne. Application of non-acne-causing strains to the skin may modulate the skin microbiome and thereby lead to a reduction in acne. This pilot study evaluates the safety and efficacy of microbiome modulation on acne-prone skin. The study had 2 phases: active induction (5% benzoyl peroxide gel, 7 days) and interventional C. acnes strains treatment (5 weeks). Patients were randomized to either topical skin formulations PT1 (2 strains of C. acnes Single Locus Sequence Typing [SLST] type C3 and K8, 50% each) or PT2 (4 strains of C. acnes SLST type C3 [55%], K8 [5%], A5 [30%] and F4 [10%]). Safety and efficacy was evaluated in 14 patients (PT1=8/14, PT2=6/14). Skin microbiome composition shifted towards study formulations. No untoward adverse events, visible irritation, or significant flare-up were observed. Non-inflamed lesions and skin pH were reduced. Comedone counts improved clinically with no deterioration in inflammatory lesions.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2019-10-08

How to Cite

Karoglan, A., Paetzold, B., De Lima, J. P., Brüggemann, H., Tüting, T., Schanze, D., … Gollnick, H. (2019). Safety and Efficacy of Topically Applied Selected Cutibacterium acnes Strains over Five Weeks in Patients with Acne Vulgaris: An Open-label, Pilot Study. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 99(13), 1253–1257. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-3323

Issue

Section

Articles