Treatment options
Tips
- Warts are benign and self-limited in nature, scarring treatments should be avoided.
- Whatever method is used there will be failures and recurrences.
- It should be explained to patients that warts often require several treatment sessions.
- To avoid scarring, treatment should be conservative.
- Precautions should be taken to avoid inhalation of virus particles in the aerosol plume when laser or electrosurgical procedures are performed.
First line
- Salicylic acid:
- Salicylic acid 12–26% in addition to lactic acid, in a quick‐drying collodion or acrylate base, is the treatment of first choice for common and plantar warts.
- Skin should be dry prior to application.
- Daily application of salicylic acid/ lactic acid/collodion (1:1:4)
- Application of petrolatum to protect the surrounding normal skin
- Occlusion may enhance the results.
- Removal of the keratin layer regularly is essential
- Be cautious using salicylic acid in daibetic patients with neuropathy or poor circulation due to the risk of ulceration.
- Glutaraldehyde:
- Glutaraldehyde 10% in aqueous ethanol or in a gel.
- Used for plantar warts.
- Cutneous necrosis is a rare complication.
- Formalin
- Compresses of formalin 2–3% in water 15–20 min daily.
- Irritant dermatitis may occur.
- Duct tape occlusion
- Continuous duct tape occlusion of common warts for up to 2 months.
- Topical 5-fluorouracil
- 5‐fluorouracil (5‐FU) 5% cream carefully applied daily under occlusion for a month.
- If use for periungual warts it may cause onycholysis.
- A combination of 5% 5‐FU and 10% salicylic acid may be used with success.
- 4 ml of 50 mg/mL 5FU + 1 ml mixture of 20 mg/mL (2%) lidocaine and 0.0125 mg/mL epinephrine mixed in a 5ml syringe injected weekly for up to 4 weeks.
- The solution is injected intralesionally in multiple warts until blanching of the lesion occurred with insulin syringe.
- Side effects inculde erythema, edema, hyperpigmentation, hypopigmentation, ulceration, necrosis, onycholysis, or scarring.
- Pain and burning sensations also occurs at the site of injection.
- Retinoic acid
- Tretinoin cream 0.05% used for plane warts.
- Cantharidin
- Topical cantharidin application is painless , bloodless, and rapid, making it suitable for pediatric use.
- It can be reapplied every three weeks.
- Used as montherapy or in combination with podophyllotoxin, and salicylic acid.
- Cantharidin is applied to individual warts and then covered with tape. Blistering will occur within 2 to 24 hours, after which time the tape should be removed and the medication washed off with soap and water.
- Trichloroacetic acid
- once-weekly application of 80% TCA solution with once-weekly.
- Vitamin D analogues
- Maxacalcitol.
- Combiantion of Maxacalcitol and salicylic acid.
- BCG vaccine paste
- Once weekly for eight consecutive weeks.[link]
Second line
- Cryotherapy
- Cryotherapy is mainly used for warts in older children and adults and often avoided in young children.
- Firstly, A surgical blade is used to debulk the wart before freezing..
- Cryotherapy is applied until a rim of iced tissue (white discoloration) about 1 mm in width is seen in the normal skin surrounding the wart.
- The freeze is continued for 5–30 s depending on the size and site of the wart.
- Continuous or pulsed spray for between 5 and 20 s, depending on the size and thickness of the wart.
- Continuous freezing over 25 s is more likely to leave scarring.
- Treatment should be repeated every 3 weeks.
- Excessive freezing times should be avoided over nerves, e.g on the sides of the fingers.
- Pain is variable between patients( persist for many hours or even a few days).
- Depigmentation may be a cosmetic concern in dark skinned patients.
- If no response was detected after six sessions, try another modality.
- Laser
- Pulsed dye laser.
- Er : YAG
- Nd : YAG
- Carbon dioxide laser: for periungual and subungual warts unresponsive to other modalities.
- Local hyperthermia: 44°C/111°F for 30 minutes on days 1, 2, 3, 17 and 18.
- Surgery
- It should be avoided since scarring may occurs and recurrences are frequent.
- Photodynamic therapy.
Third line (severe and recalcitrant)
- Podophyllotoxin
- Mainly used for the treatment of ano‐genital warts.
- Self-applied podophyllotoxin 0.5% solution twice a day for 3 days repeated weekly
- Not to be used in children
- Contraindicated in pregnancy
- Side effects include: erythema and erosions.
- Imiquimod
- Imiquimod 5% cream is used mainly for genital warts treatment.
- Side effects include irritation, discomfort and occasionally erosion at the point of application with a small risk of causing vitiligo‐like depigmentation
- Topical immunotherapy
- performed by clinicians
- 0.5–4% DPCP at 3-week intervals
- Intralesional immunotherapy
- Candida antigen: 0.3 ml candida antigen is injected into the largest wart at first visit and then every 3 weeks
- MMR vaccine:
- Prior sensitivity testing was done using a dose of 0.1mL via injection intradermally into the volar aspect of the left forearm.
- The injected sites were examined after two weeks for immune response in the form of erythema or nodule formation.
- In sensitized patients, 0.5mL of MMR vaccine after reconstitution with distilled water was injected intradermally into their single largest wart.
- Injections were given every two weeks for a total of five sessions.
- PPD : 0.1-0.3 mL injected into the oldest and/or largest wart with 1-3 week intervals between sessions for a total of 6 injections.
- Interferon
- H2 receptor antagonists
- Cimetidine :30–40 mg/kg/day for 3–4 months
- Ranitidine: 300 mg twice daily.
- Zinc
- Oral zinc sulphate :10 mg/kg/day.
- Topical zinc sulphate 10% aqueous solution applied three times daily for 4 weeks for plane warts.
- Levamisole
- 2.5–5 mg/kg/day for 3 consecutive days every 2 weeks for 4–5 months.
- Oral retinoids
- Isotretinoin 0.5 mg/kg/day for 2 months used for treatment of plane warts.
- low‐dose acitretin.
- Intralesional bleomycin
- Bleomycin sulphate 0.25–1 mg/mL is injected up to three times to a maximum total dose of 4 mg.
- Pain may persist for up to 2 days and is followed by tissue necrosis.
- Reported complications include nail loss or dystrophy following periungual injections, Raynaud phenomenon in treated fingers and local pigmentation.
- Treatment with bleomycin is not recommended for children, pregnant women, immunosuppressed patients, or patients with vascular disease because of systemic absorption.
- Cidofovir
- intravenously (3–5 mg/kg as a single dose given every 1–2 weeks) for very severe warts and can also be injected intralesionally, diluted from 375 mg/mL to 15 mg/mL and injected monthly [193] or applied as a 1% cream.
- Side effects, mainly seen with systemic administration, include nephrotoxicity, metabolic acidosis and bone marrow suppression.
- Local application especially on mucosal surfaces can produce erosion and pain
- Psychological methods
- Hypnosis
#Cutaneous warts treatment #Treatment of warts #Warts treatment