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- Title
Practices, Efficacy, and Reported Side Effects Associated with Isotretinoin Treatment in Palestine.
- Authors
Abukhalil, Abdallah Damin; Yousef, Mai; Ammar, Marwa; Jaghama, Weam; Al-Shami, Ni'meh; Naseef, Hani A; Rabba, Abdullah K
- Abstract
This study aims to evaluate the current clinical practices, adherence to clinical guidelines, efficacy, and reported side effects associated with Isotretinoin treatment in Palestine. Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional online questionnaire-based study using social media platforms (eg, Facebook and Telegram) was conducted among Birzeit University students in April 2023. This study included participants aged ≥ 18 years with a history of isotretinoin treatment; subjects with incomplete data were excluded. Statistical significance was set at P < 0.05. SPSS version 27 was used for data analysis. Results: A total of 548 participants were included in the study, the majority of most of whom were female (96%). The most predominant side effects were cracked, dry lips and xeroderma (96.2%). Moreover, 12% of participants had depression. Most respondents were educated about medication side effects and only 39.1% were counseled about blood donation. Of the 59 sexually active women, only 4 (6.8%) were asked for a recent pregnancy test. A total of 60.2% of dermatologists adhered to the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) guidelines, and 48.7% ordered the required laboratory tests before initiating isotretinoin treatment. Only 1.7% of pharmacists followed the FDA-suggested protocols for dispensing isotretinoin to childbearing females. Conclusion: Adherence to isotretinoin safety prescribing protocols to provide patient education, monitoring, and ordering of laboratories to ensure patient safety can be improved by adapting policies and protocols in pharmacy and medical practice in Palestine to monitor and enforce adherence when prescribing, dispensing, or taking high-risk medications.
- Subjects
PALESTINE; SOCIAL media; DRUG side effects; ISOTRETINOIN; MEDICAL practice; PREGNANCY tests
- Publication
Patient Preference & Adherence, 2024, Vol 18, p487
- ISSN
1177-889X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2147/PPA.S442436