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Receive a clinical evaluation by a board-certified provider for acne — tretinoin, clindamycin, doxycycline, spironolactone. Treatment may include medical advice, prescriptions (when appropriate), or referral for in-person care. Evidence-based AAD guidelines.

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Understanding Acne Vulgaris — Pathophysiology & Grading

Acne vulgaris is a multifactorial chronic inflammatory disorder of the pilosebaceous unit affecting an estimated 50 million Americans annually. The pathophysiology involves four key mechanisms: follicular hyperkeratinization (abnormal shedding of skin cells that plug the follicle), excess sebum production (driven by androgens), colonization and proliferation of Cutibacterium acnes (formerly Propionibacterium acnes), and the resulting inflammatory cascade. Understanding which of these mechanisms predominates in a given patient guides targeted treatment selection.

Skin care consultation — acne treatment and management

Acne lesions are classified as non-inflammatory (comedonal) or inflammatory. Comedones are plugged follicles: open comedones are blackheads (oxidized keratin plug), closed comedones are whiteheads. Inflammatory lesions include papules (solid raised lesions under 5mm), pustules (pus-containing lesions), nodules (deep, firm lesions over 5mm), and cysts (fluctuant, deep lesions prone to scarring). Severity grading ranges from mild (primarily comedonal or few inflammatory lesions) to moderate (multiple inflammatory papules and pustules) to severe (nodular/cystic acne covering large areas). Accurate grading by your board-certified provider, guides stepwise treatment selection aligned with AAD acne guidelines.

Acne disproportionately affects the face, chest, and back — the sebaceous gland-dense areas. Hormonal acne in adult women often presents as deep, painful, predominantly jawline and chin lesions that flare perimenstrually, reflecting androgen-driven seborrhea. This pattern responds well to anti-androgen therapies such as spironolactone and oral contraceptives in addition to conventional topical regimens. Accurate pattern recognition via photo and video assessment is central to Innocre's acne evaluation process.

Acne Treatments Available Online

Topical Retinoids

Tretinoin (0.025%–0.1%) and adapalene — normalize follicular keratinization, comedolytic

Benzoyl Peroxide (BPO)

2.5%–10% — bactericidal, reduces C. acnes load, prevents antibiotic resistance

Topical Clindamycin

1% gel or solution — anti-inflammatory, anti-C. acnes; always combined with BPO

Oral Antibiotics

Doxycycline 50–100mg, minocycline 50–100mg — for moderate-to-severe inflammatory acne

Spironolactone (Women)

25–200mg/day — anti-androgen for hormonal, jawline-predominant acne in women

Oral Contraceptives (Women)

FDA-approved OCPs (Yaz, Estrostep, Ortho Tri-Cyclen) for hormonal acne management

Azelaic Acid

15–20% — comedolytic, anti-inflammatory, good option in pregnancy and for PIH

Skincare & Regimen Guidance

Non-comedogenic moisturizer, SPF 30+, gentle cleanser — foundational to any acne plan

Evidence-Based Acne Care — AAD Guidelines & Isotretinoin Note

The American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) 2016 acne clinical guidelines — updated with supplements through 2024 — form the evidence backbone for acne management at Innocre. The guidelines recommend topical retinoids as the cornerstone of most acne treatment regimens due to their ability to prevent and clear both comedonal and inflammatory lesions. Benzoyl peroxide is recommended in all antibiotic-containing regimens to prevent the emergence of antibiotic-resistant C. acnes. Oral antibiotics are time-limited therapies (typically 3–6 months) always used in combination with topical agents — never as monotherapy. your provider's prescribing practices reflect these evidence-based principles.

For women with hormonal acne patterns — typically adult women with deep, painful, cyclical breakouts along the jaw and chin — spironolactone is a highly effective off-label but guideline-supported option. Starting at 25–50mg daily and titrating up to 100–200mg as tolerated, spironolactone reduces sebum production by blocking androgen receptors. Potassium monitoring and blood pressure checks are appropriate for higher doses. Combined oral contraceptive pills with low androgenic progestins are also effective and FDA-approved for acne. These options are available via telehealth for appropriate candidates.

Isotretinoin (Accutane) is the most effective treatment for severe nodular/cystic acne and acne resistant to other therapies, but it cannot be prescribed via telehealth. Isotretinoin requires enrollment in the FDA's iPLEDGE Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) program — mandatory monthly labs, in-person pregnancy tests for women of childbearing potential, and monthly in-person visits for the duration of treatment. Patients with severe acne, significant scarring, or acne unresponsive to multiple other treatments will receive a referral to an in-person dermatologist for isotretinoin evaluation.

Isotretinoin Cannot Be Prescribed via Telehealth

Isotretinoin (Accutane, Claravis, Absorica) requires the iPLEDGE REMS program and cannot be initiated or maintained through telehealth. This includes:

  • Monthly in-person visits and physical examination during the course
  • Monthly pregnancy tests (urine and serum) for women of childbearing potential
  • CBC, lipid panel, and LFT monitoring throughout treatment
  • iPLEDGE system registration for patient, prescriber, and pharmacy
  • If you need isotretinoin, your provider will refer you to in-person dermatology with a clinical summary
Medical Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. A licensed provider evaluation is required for diagnosis and treatment decisions.

Acne Treatment Online — Frequently Asked Questions

Acne treatment requires patience. Topical retinoids typically show initial results in 8–12 weeks, with full benefit at 3–6 months. An initial "purging" phase with temporary worsening may occur in the first 2–4 weeks of retinoid use — this is normal and not a reason to stop. Oral antibiotics typically show improvement within 4–8 weeks. Spironolactone may take 3 months for significant hormonal acne response. Consistency with the regimen is the single most important factor in achieving clearance.
Yes. Tretinoin is a prescription topical retinoid that can be prescribed via telehealth when clinically appropriate. During your visit, your provider will assess your acne type, skin sensitivity, history of prior retinoid use, and any contraindications (including pregnancy — topical tretinoin should be avoided in pregnancy due to potential teratogenic risk). Appropriate strength (0.025%, 0.05%, or 0.1%) will be selected based on skin tolerance and acne severity, with guidance on application technique to minimize irritation.
Cyclical, hormonally-driven acne in adult women responding to androgens is a common and treatable pattern. The two most effective systemic options are spironolactone (an anti-androgen medication) and FDA-approved combined oral contraceptive pills. Both can be evaluated and prescribed via telehealth. Spironolactone requires baseline blood pressure review and, at higher doses, periodic potassium monitoring. These options are particularly effective for deep, painful cysts and jawline-predominant breakouts that do not fully respond to topical therapy alone.
Yes — and this is an important clinical principle. The AAD strongly recommends against topical antibiotic monotherapy due to the risk of antibiotic-resistant C. acnes emerging with widespread use. Combining topical clindamycin with benzoyl peroxide — either in a fixed-dose combination product (Benzaclin, Duac) or as separate products used together — significantly reduces resistance risk while improving efficacy. your provider follows this guideline in every acne treatment plan involving topical antibiotics.
Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) — the dark marks left after acne lesions heal — is a common concern, particularly in patients with darker skin tones. Tretinoin and azelaic acid both have evidence for improving PIH in addition to treating active acne, making them especially valuable in patients with both concerns. Strict daily sunscreen use (SPF 30+) is essential as UV exposure significantly worsens PIH. your provider will tailor your acne regimen to address both active breakouts and post-acne marks.
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