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Frequently Using Antifungal Skin Medicines? Study Explains Why You Must Be Careful

As is seen with the overuse of antibiotics, fungi naturally build up resistance to antifungal medicines the more they are exposed to them. 

  • The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention team believes that antifungal topical creams are being overprescribed
  • One of the biggest emerging threats is drug-resistant forms of ringworm (a form of dermatophytosis)
  • Long-term, extensive use of clotrimazole-betamethasone can also trigger hormonal problems, the study said

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Frequently Using Antifungal Skin Medicines? Study Explains Why You Must Be Careful Image by Freepik (representational purposes)

Doctors are prescribing antifungal creams to patients with skin complaints at rates so high that they could be contributing to the rise of drug-resistant infections, according to new research. These are "severe antimicrobial-resistant superficial fungal infections, which have recently been detected in the US," noted a team led by Jeremy Gold, a researcher at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

One of the biggest emerging threats is drug-resistant forms of ringworm (a form of dermatophytosis). In Southeast Asia, major outbreaks of this itchy, circular rash have occurred that are not responding to either topical antifungal creams or pills. Cases of ringworm resistant to drugs have also now been spotted in 11 US states, Gold's team noted. This is leading to "patients experiencing extensive lesions and delays in diagnosis," the team said.

As is seen with the overuse of antibiotics, fungi naturally build up resistance to antifungal medicines the more they are exposed to them. The CDC team believes that antifungal topical creams are being overprescribed.

The findings, published in the latest issue of the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, showed that primary care doctors wrote the biggest percentage of these prescriptions, but dermatologists and podiatrists had much higher rates on a prescriptions-per-doctor basis. One of the big issues, according to Gold's team, is that most doctors diagnose a skin condition simply by looking at it, a method that is "frequently incorrect," even among board-certified dermatologists. "Confirmatory diagnostic testing" of a skin lesion beyond just looking at it is rarely done, they added.

A small percentage of physicians are prescribing antifungal drugs at exceedingly high rates. In 2021, "10 per cent of antifungal prescribers nearly one-half of these medications," the team found. The new study probably only captures a fraction of the overuse of antifungals, since "most topical antifungals can be purchased over the counter without a prescription," the researchers noted. The high use of clotrimazole-betamethasone, in particular, is thought to be a big factor in the emergence of drug-resistant ringworm. This drug (a combination of a steroid and an antifungal) can also "cause skin damage if applied to intertriginous areas," meaning areas where the skin folds onto itself, such as occurs around the groin, buttocks and armpits.

Long-term, extensive use of clotrimazole-betamethasone can also trigger hormonal problems, the team said. The bottom line, is "healthcare providers should be judicious in prescribing topical antifungals" for suspected fungal skin infections, and go beyond a visual diagnosis when possible," according to researchers.

Doctors should also try to "educate patients about the correct use of topical antifungals and combination antifungal-corticosteroids" to help reduce overprescribing and the danger of drug-resistant fungal disease, they added.

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