Medication Selector
Compare all treatments for every ichthyosis type. Filter by your type, see efficacy data, costs, and side effects — then talk to your dermatologist.
29 medications shown
| Drug / Treatment | Works for | Category | Efficacy | NHS Cost | Timeline | Evidence | Side Effects | |
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50:50 White Soft Paraffin / Liquid Paraffin Emollient — Barrier |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequinNethertonKID | Emollient | NHS: Free £3–5 / 500g |
Days–weeks | RCT |
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MechanismOcclusive barrier reduces transepidermal water loss (TEWL). Softens scale and reduces friction. DosingApply liberally 2–4× daily, especially after bathing. Use large quantities (500g/week typical for severe cases). MonitoringNo monitoring required. Check for skin infection signs. NotesFirst-line treatment for all ichthyosis types. FLAMMABLE — keep away from flames and cigarettes. Wash clothing frequently. | ||||||||
Urea 10–40% Cream Emollient — Keratolytic |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequin | Emollient | NHS: Free £8–15 / 100g |
2–4 weeks | RCT |
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MechanismUrea disrupts hydrogen bonding in keratin, softening and dissolving scale. Higher concentrations (30–40%) are more keratolytic. Dosing10% for maintenance moisturising; 30–40% for thick scale reduction. Apply 1–2× daily. Avoid open wounds. MonitoringNo blood monitoring. Watch for skin irritation. Start with lower concentration. NotesHighly effective keratolytic. Particularly useful on palms/soles. Can sting on fissured skin — dilute or switch to lower % if needed. | ||||||||
Lactic Acid 5–12% Lotion Topical — Alpha-hydroxy acid |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarBathing Suit | Topical | NHS: Free £10–20 / 200ml |
2–6 weeks | Review |
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MechanismAHA breaks down corneocyte cohesion, promoting scale shedding. Also increases water binding in stratum corneum. DosingApply to damp skin after bath/shower. Use 5% initially, increase to 12% if tolerated. Once or twice daily. MonitoringNo blood tests. Apply sunscreen when using — photosensitising. Avoid eye area. NotesGood for body areas with thick scale. Amlactin (12%) and CeraVe SA are well-tolerated OTC options. Not for face or genital area. | ||||||||
Tazarotene Cream 0.05–0.1% Topical Retinoid |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellar | Topical | Off-label £40–80 / tube |
4–8 weeks | Case series |
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MechanismBinds RAR-β and RAR-γ receptors, normalising keratinocyte differentiation and reducing hyperkeratosis. DosingApply thin layer to affected areas once daily (evening). Start with 0.05%, increase if tolerated. MonitoringContraindicated in pregnancy/breastfeeding. Negative pregnancy test required before start. No blood monitoring. NotesMore potent than tretinoin topically. Use sunscreen. Do not apply to face or genitals. Wrap method improves penetration on thick scale. | ||||||||
Acitretin (Neotigason) Systemic Retinoid — Oral |
LamellarHarlequinNethertonKIDBathing Suit | Systemic | NHS: Free £120–200/mo |
4–12 weeks | RCT |
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MechanismBinds retinoic acid receptors, normalising keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation. Reduces scale thickness and turnover rate. DosingStarting dose: 0.3–0.5 mg/kg/day. Maintenance: lowest effective dose (often 10–25mg/day). Take with food (fat improves absorption). MonitoringLFTs + lipids at baseline, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, then every 3 months. Avoid vitamin A supplements. X-Plan (Pregnancy Prevention Programme) mandatory in women of childbearing potential. NotesGold-standard systemic for severe ichthyosis. Teratogenic for 3 years after stopping — critical counselling needed. Most effective for lamellar and harlequin types. | ||||||||
Isotretinoin (Roaccutane) Systemic Retinoid — Oral |
LamellarHarlequinBathing Suit | Systemic | Off-label £80–150/mo |
4–12 weeks | Case series |
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MechanismSimilar to acitretin — normalises keratinocyte differentiation. Shorter teratogenic window (1 month vs 3 years for acitretin). DosingOff-label for ichthyosis. Dose: 0.3–0.5 mg/kg/day. Often used when acitretin not tolerated. MonitoringLFTs, lipids, pregnancy test (iPLEDGE or equivalent). 1-month washout for contraception after stopping. NotesPreferred over acitretin in women of childbearing age due to shorter teratogenic period. Similar efficacy but less evidence for ichthyosis specifically. | ||||||||
Dupilumab (Dupixent) Biologic — IL-4/IL-13 inhibitor |
NethertonHarlequin | Biologic | Compassionate £8,000–14,000/yr |
4–16 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismMonoclonal antibody blocking IL-4Rα, inhibiting IL-4 and IL-13 signalling. Reduces Th2-driven inflammation. Particularly relevant in Netherton (SPINK5 defect drives Th2 skewing). Dosing300mg SC every 2 weeks (after loading dose). Self-injectable pen. Prescribed off-label via compassionate use or MDT decision. MonitoringRegular dermatology review. No specific blood tests required but ophthalmology if conjunctivitis develops. NotesGrowing evidence in Netherton syndrome. Case reports show dramatic improvement in itch, scaling, and skin infections. May become standard of care. Currently requires specialist application for NHS funding. | ||||||||
Secukinumab (Cosentyx) Biologic — IL-17A inhibitor |
NethertonKID | Biologic | Compassionate £9,000–12,000/yr |
8–24 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismSelectively inhibits IL-17A, reducing neutrophil recruitment and keratinocyte activation. May normalise abnormal differentiation. Dosing300mg SC weekly × 5 doses, then monthly. Dermatology specialist only. MonitoringScreen for TB before starting. Monitor for signs of IBD. Regular dermatology follow-up. NotesLimited but positive evidence in Netherton syndrome. Off-label use. Caution in IBD history. | ||||||||
Low-dose Antibiotics (Flucloxacillin / Erythromycin) Prophylactic Antimicrobial |
NethertonKIDHarlequin | Systemic | NHS: Free £10–20/mo |
Weeks (prophylaxis) | Review |
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MechanismReduces recurrent Staphylococcus aureus skin colonisation, which exacerbates inflammation and barrier dysfunction in Netherton and KID syndrome. DosingFlucloxacillin 250mg twice daily (long-term prophylaxis). Erythromycin as alternative if penicillin-allergic. MonitoringRegular review to assess ongoing need. Annual culture if recurrent infections. Monitor for resistance patterns. NotesUsed prophylactically to prevent recurrent skin infections, not treat acute episodes. Discuss antibiotic stewardship with specialist. | ||||||||
Phytanic Acid-Restricted Diet Dietary Intervention |
Refsum Disease | Systemic | NHS: Dietitian Dietary cost |
Months–years | Review |
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MechanismPHYH enzyme deficiency impairs phytanic acid oxidation. Dietary restriction reduces phytanic acid accumulation, preventing further neurological and dermatological damage. DosingRestrict dairy fat, ruminant meats, certain fish. Target serum phytanic acid <200 μmol/L. Supervised by metabolic dietitian. MonitoringRegular serum phytanic acid levels (3–6 monthly). Nerve conduction studies. Ophthalmology for retinitis pigmentosa. Annual cardiac echo. NotesPRIMARY treatment for Refsum disease. Must be maintained lifelong. Plasmapheresis used in acute crises or to rapidly reduce phytanic acid. Co-manage with metabolic specialist and neurologist. | ||||||||
Plasmapheresis Extracorporeal Procedure |
Refsum Disease | Systemic | NHS: Hospital £1,500–3,000/session |
Days (acute) | Review |
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MechanismRemoves phytanic acid directly from plasma. Used when dietary restriction is insufficient or during acute exacerbations. Also used perioperatively. DosingSchedule determined by metabolic specialist. Series of sessions to reduce phytanic acid burden. Maintenance sessions ongoing if diet alone insufficient. MonitoringPre- and post-session phytanic acid levels. Coagulation, albumin, calcium. Specialist centre required. NotesAdjunct to dietary restriction, not a replacement. Used for acute worsening or to rapidly lower levels before surgery. Specialist centres only. | ||||||||
Ciclosporin (Cyclosporine) Systemic Immunosuppressant |
NethertonHarlequin | Systemic | NHS (specialist) £200–400/mo |
4–8 weeks | Case series |
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MechanismCalcineurin inhibitor — blocks T-cell activation. Reduces inflammatory cascade driving skin inflammation in Netherton syndrome. Dosing2.5–5 mg/kg/day in 2 divided doses. Short-term courses preferred. Maximum 1–2 years continuous use. MonitoringBP every 2 weeks initially. Renal function (creatinine), LFTs, FBC at baseline then monthly. Avoid nephrotoxic drugs. NotesUsually short-term bridge while other treatments initiate. Long-term risk of nephrotoxicity and malignancy limits use. Significant drug interactions — check all medications. | ||||||||
Tacrolimus 0.03–0.1% Ointment (Protopic) Topical Calcineurin Inhibitor |
NethertonVulgaris | Topical | NHS: Free £25–50 / 60g |
2–6 weeks | Review |
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MechanismInhibits calcineurin → blocks T-cell activation → reduces inflammatory cytokines at skin level. Steroid-free immunosuppression. DosingThin layer to affected areas twice daily. 0.03% for children ≥2 years; 0.1% for adults. Reduce to once daily or twice weekly when controlled. MonitoringNo blood tests. Avoid prolonged use on large areas or under occlusion. Use sunscreen — theoretical photosensitivity concern. NotesUseful for face and flexures where steroids are undesirable. Caution in active skin infection. MHRA advises against continuous long-term use — pulse therapy preferred. | ||||||||
Topical Lovastatin + Cholesterol (2% / 2%) Topical Statin — CHILD Syndrome specific |
CHILD Syndrome | Topical | Compounded only £80–200/month |
8–24 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismCHILD syndrome caused by NSDHL deficiency in cholesterol biosynthesis pathway. Topical statin + cholesterol corrects the local metabolic defect in affected skin. DosingCompounded 2% lovastatin + 2% cholesterol in petrolatum. Apply twice daily to affected (unilateral) areas. Compounding pharmacy required. MonitoringNo specific monitoring. Clinical photography to track response. Specialist dermatology follow-up. NotesDisease-specific treatment — only for CHILD syndrome. Remarkable case reports showing near-complete clearance. Must be compounded. Contact specialist centres (Great Ormond Street, etc.). | ||||||||
N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) Antioxidant / Mucolytic |
NethertonKIDLamellar | Systemic | Off-label / OTC £10–30/mo |
8–16 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismPrecursor to glutathione. May reduce oxidative stress in skin. Some evidence for improving ichthyosis severity, but weak evidence base. Dosing600mg twice daily (oral) as adjunct. Also available as effervescent tablets (used for respiratory conditions, repurposed here). MonitoringNo specific monitoring. Generally well-tolerated. Take with food to reduce GI effects. NotesLimited evidence but low risk. May be worth trying as adjunct in severe cases. Discuss with dermatologist. Available OTC but discuss with specialist before starting. | ||||||||
Oilatum / Balneum Bath Additives Emollient — Bath Additive |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequin | Emollient | NHS: Free £5–12 |
Days | Review |
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MechanismOil dispersed in bath water coats skin, reducing water loss after bathing. Helps rehydrate and soften scale before applying leave-on emollients. DosingAdd recommended amount to warm (not hot) bath. Soak 10–20 minutes. Pat dry gently, apply emollient immediately while skin still damp. MonitoringNon-slip mat essential — oil makes baths very slippery. No medical monitoring. NotesUseful adjunct to daily routine. Works best combined with leave-on emollients applied immediately post-bath. Balneum Plus contains lauromacrogol for antipruritic effect. | ||||||||
Calcipotriol (Dovonex) 0.005% Topical Vitamin D Analogue |
LamellarVulgarisX-Linked | Topical | NHS: Free £15–30 / 60g |
4–8 weeks | Case series |
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MechanismVitamin D analogue that modulates keratinocyte differentiation via VDR receptor. Reduces hyperproliferation. Limited evidence base for ichthyosis. DosingApply thin layer to affected areas once or twice daily. Maximum 100g/week to avoid systemic hypercalcaemia. Not for face/genitals. MonitoringCalcium monitoring if using large areas or long-term. No other specific monitoring. NotesLimited ichthyosis-specific evidence. More commonly used for psoriasis. May be worth trying for scale reduction as adjunct. Combine with emollient. | ||||||||
Ruxolitinib / Baricitinib (JAK inhibitors) Systemic — JAK Inhibitor |
NethertonKID | Systemic | Compassionate £8,000–15,000/yr |
4–12 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismJAK1/2 inhibitors block cytokine signalling driving inflammatory ichthyosis. Particularly relevant for GJB2-associated KID syndrome with dysregulated EGFR/JAK signalling. DosingOff-label dosing — specialist only. Ruxolitinib 5–20mg twice daily oral; baricitinib 2–4mg once daily. MonitoringFBC, lipids, LFTs, renal function at baseline, 4 weeks, then 3-monthly. Herpes zoster prophylaxis consider. MACE and VTE risk screening. NotesEmerging evidence in ichthyosis. Black box warning for serious infections, malignancy, and cardiovascular events. Specialist MDT decision required. Tofacitinib also reported in case studies. | ||||||||
Udrate Cream (Urea 10% + Lactic Acid 5%) Emollient — Keratolytic Combination |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequinNetherton | Topical | NHS: Free £8–14 / 100g |
2–4 weeks | RCT |
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MechanismUrea hydrates the stratum corneum and at 10% acts as a keratolytic, loosening and softening scale. Lactic acid (5%) provides additional AHA exfoliation and moisture-binding via lactate in the NMF. Together they tackle both scale build-up and transepidermal water loss. Replaces CalmuridCalmurid (urea 10% + lactic acid 5%) was discontinued in the UK in 2023. Udrate contains the identical active formula and is considered a direct NHS substitute. GPs can prescribe Udrate on FP10; if unavailable, request urea 10%/lactic acid 5% cream as a specials formulation. DosingApply to affected areas once or twice daily after bathing while skin is still slightly damp. Avoid open wounds or actively inflamed skin — the lactic acid will sting. For very thick scale, apply under cling-film occlusion overnight to boost penetration. NotesOne of the highest-evidence topical keratolytic emollients for ichthyosis. Well tolerated for long-term daily use. Can be combined with a plain emollient base applied on top for extra moisture. Particularly effective for X-linked and lamellar ichthyosis where scale is dense and adherent. | ||||||||
Alitretinoin (Toctino) Systemic Retinoid — Oral (9-cis-retinoic acid) |
LamellarHarlequinKIDPIBIDS | Systemic | Off-label £200–350/mo |
4–12 weeks | Case series |
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Mechanism9-cis-retinoic acid — activates both RAR and RXR nuclear receptors. Broader receptor binding than acitretin. Licensed for severe chronic hand eczema; used off-label for ichthyosis when acitretin is contraindicated or not tolerated. DosingOff-label: typically 10–30mg once daily with main meal. Shorter teratogenic washout (1 month) versus acitretin (3 years) — sometimes preferred in women. Licensed dose (hand eczema): 30mg/day. MonitoringPregnancy test before starting and monthly. LFTs and lipids at baseline and 4–8 weekly. X-Plan not required but contraception mandatory during treatment and 1 month after. NotesCase series show efficacy comparable to acitretin in lamellar and congenital ichthyosis. Preferred in women of childbearing potential due to shorter washout. Specialist-only prescription. | ||||||||
Liarozole Systemic — Retinoic Acid Metabolism Blocker (RAMB) |
LamellarHarlequinX-Linked | Systemic | Compassionate Not available OTC |
4–8 weeks | RCT |
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MechanismInhibits CYP26 enzymes that break down endogenous retinoic acid, effectively raising skin retinoic acid levels without exogenous retinoid supplementation. More targeted mechanism than oral retinoids. Dosing75–150mg twice daily (oral). Phase 2/3 trials used 75mg BD. Not commercially available in UK — accessed via compassionate use or named-patient programme. MonitoringSame as oral retinoids: LFTs, lipids, pregnancy test. Teratogenic — effective contraception mandatory. NotesPositive Phase 2 RCT data for lamellar ichthyosis (van Steensel 2006, PMID 16899155). Not currently licensed in UK. Being evaluated as an alternative to acitretin. Contact specialist centres for compassionate access. | ||||||||
Salicylic Acid 2–6% Gel / Ointment Topical Keratolytic — Beta-hydroxy acid |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequin | Topical | NHS: Free £5–15 / 100g |
1–3 weeks | Review |
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MechanismSoftens and dissolves the intercellular cement holding keratinocytes together, promoting scale shedding. Also lowers skin surface pH, improving emollient penetration. DosingApply 2% preparation to affected areas once or twice daily. Higher concentrations (5–6%) for thick plantar or scalp scale. Avoid in infants and over large BSA to prevent salicylate absorption. MonitoringNo routine monitoring for limited areas. Caution in renal impairment. Do not use >10% BSA in children — salicylate toxicity risk (tinnitus, nausea). NotesOne of the most effective and affordable keratolytics. Available as Diprosalic ointment (salicylic acid 3% + betamethasone) on NHS. Particularly useful for scalp scale and palmoplantar keratoderma. Never use under occlusion over large areas. | ||||||||
Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIG) Systemic — Immunomodulator |
NethertonHarlequin | Systemic | NHS (specialist) £2,000–5,000/infusion |
Weeks–months | Case reports |
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MechanismHigh-dose pooled immunoglobulins modulate immune dysregulation — mechanisms include Fc receptor blockade, neutralisation of pathogenic antibodies and cytokines, and T-cell regulation. Used as rescue therapy in severe inflammatory ichthyosis. Dosing2g/kg IV over 2–5 days, repeated every 4–8 weeks depending on response. Hospital infusion unit required. Specialist haematology/immunology co-management. MonitoringRenal function pre- and post-infusion. IgA levels (anaphylaxis risk if IgA deficient). Monitor for VTE, haemolysis. NotesReserved for severe cases resistant to other treatments. Case reports in Netherton and neonatal ichthyosis. NHS England requires Individual Funding Request. Often used as a bridge to biologic therapy. | ||||||||
Ixekizumab (Taltz) Biologic — IL-17A inhibitor |
NethertonKID | Biologic | Compassionate £11,000–14,000/yr |
8–24 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismHigh-affinity monoclonal antibody against IL-17A. More potent IL-17A inhibition than secukinumab. Reduces neutrophil recruitment and keratinocyte activation driven by IL-17A signalling. Dosing160mg SC loading dose, then 80mg every 2 weeks for 12 weeks, then 80mg monthly. Self-injectable autoinjector. Off-label for ichthyosis. MonitoringTB and hepatitis B screening before starting. Monitor for IBD symptoms. Regular dermatology review. NotesCase reports show benefit in Netherton syndrome and KID syndrome when secukinumab was insufficient. Avoid in active IBD. Similar cautions to secukinumab but potentially more potent IL-17A blockade. | ||||||||
Ustekinumab (Stelara) Biologic — IL-12/IL-23 inhibitor |
NethertonLamellar | Biologic | Compassionate £9,000–13,000/yr |
8–16 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismBinds the p40 subunit shared by IL-12 and IL-23, blocking Th1 and Th17 differentiation. Reduces both Th1-driven scaling and Th17-driven inflammation seen in some ichthyosis subtypes. Dosing45mg or 90mg SC at weeks 0 and 4, then every 12 weeks. Weight-based dosing in paediatrics. Off-label for ichthyosis. MonitoringTB and hepatitis B screening. Annual review of ongoing benefit. NotesLimited but positive case reports in Netherton syndrome and lamellar ichthyosis. Well-tolerated long-term profile. Now off-patent — biosimilars available reducing cost. Considered when dupilumab or IL-17 inhibitors have failed. | ||||||||
Epaderm / Hydromol Ointment Emollient — Barrier Repair (Anhydrous) |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequin | Emollient | NHS: Free £8–15 / 500g |
Days | RCT |
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MechanismAnhydrous emollient ointments (paraffin-based) provide superior occlusive barrier vs. cream formulations. Epaderm contains emulsifying wax, yellow soft paraffin, and liquid paraffin — usable as leave-on, soap substitute, and bath additive. Hydromol ointment is similar formulation. DosingApply liberally and frequently to all affected areas. Can also be used as a soap substitute and bath additive — making it a versatile 3-in-1 product. Typical usage: 500g–1kg/week for severe ichthyosis. MonitoringFLAMMABLE — paraffin soaks into fabrics. NHS Fire Safety Alert: patients using paraffin-based emollients should be warned not to smoke or go near open flames, and to wash clothing/bedding regularly at high temperatures. NotesOften preferred over 50:50 ointment due to its triple-use versatility (leave-on, wash, bath). Large quantities can be prescribed on NHS for severe ichthyosis. Available in tubs up to 1kg. Frequently preferred by ichthyosis community for its consistency and ease of use in bath. | ||||||||
Vitamin D3 (Colecalciferol) Supplementation Systemic — Nutritional Supplement |
VulgarisX-LinkedLamellarHarlequin | Systemic | NHS: Free £5–10/mo |
3–6 months | Review |
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MechanismIchthyosis patients are at high risk of vitamin D deficiency due to impaired UV-B synthesis through thickened/scaled skin. Vitamin D has immunomodulatory and keratinocyte-differentiating effects via VDR. Repleting deficiency may improve barrier function and reduce infection susceptibility. DosingStandard supplementation: 1,000–4,000 IU/day colecalciferol. Higher doses (up to 10,000 IU/day) if severely deficient — guided by serum 25-OH vitamin D levels. Target 75–150 nmol/L. Prescribe via GP on NHS. MonitoringCheck serum 25-OH vitamin D at baseline and after 3 months supplementation. Annual thereafter. Check calcium if using high doses. NotesStudies (PMID 25091406, 34396419) confirm high prevalence of deficiency in ichthyosis. Supplementation is safe, cheap, and widely recommended by specialists. Not a direct treatment for scaling but addresses a common co-morbidity. All ichthyosis patients should have vitamin D levels checked annually. | ||||||||
Topical Simvastatin 5% Topical Statin — CHILD Syndrome specific |
CHILD Syndrome | Topical | Compounded only £80–200/month |
8–20 weeks | Case reports |
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MechanismNSDHL deficiency in CHILD syndrome blocks the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway at a different step than DHCR7. Topical simvastatin (HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor) combined with cholesterol corrects the local sterol imbalance. Simvastatin 5% in petrolatum is an alternative compounded formulation to lovastatin/cholesterol. DosingCompounded 5% simvastatin in petrolatum applied twice daily to affected (always unilateral) skin. Must be prepared by specialist compounding pharmacy. MonitoringNo routine blood monitoring required for topical use. Clinical photography to track response. Specialist paediatric dermatology follow-up essential. NotesAlternative to lovastatin/cholesterol combination (see above) when lovastatin is unavailable. Both are used off-label for CHILD syndrome only. Dramatic responses reported in literature. Contact GOSH or specialist CHILD syndrome centres for compounding advice. | ||||||||
ATR-01 (Topical Cholic Acid) Topical — Steroid Sulfatase substrate (Pipeline) |
X-Linked | Topical | Clinical trial only Not available |
4–8 weeks | Phase 2 trial |
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MechanismX-linked ichthyosis is caused by STS (steroid sulfatase) deficiency, causing cholesterol sulfate accumulation. ATR-01 is a topical formulation containing cholic acid derivatives that compensate for the STS deficiency by providing an alternative pathway to reduce cholesterol sulfate accumulation in the stratum corneum. DosingClinical trial dosing only. Phase 2 trial (NCT04483362) enrolled adults with confirmed XLI. Not available outside of trial setting. Check ClinicalTrials.gov for current recruitment status. MonitoringTrial-specific monitoring. No approved use outside clinical trial. NotesFirst disease-modifying topical approach targeting the root cause of XLI (STS deficiency). Developed by Timber Pharmaceuticals. Promising Phase 2 data. Could represent the first approved topical therapy specifically for XLI. Check ichthyosis.me clinical trials page for latest status. | ||||||||
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All medications are prescription only
Even OTC products like emollients are best prescribed via GP for ichthyosis to ensure adequate quantities on NHS.
Systemic drugs need specialist supervision
Retinoids, biologics, and immunosuppressants require specialist initiation and ongoing monitoring. Never start without supervision.
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