Avita Side Effects
Please note - some side effects for Avita may not be reported. Always consult your doctor or healthcare specialist for medical advice. You may also report side effects to the FDA.
Side Effects of Avita - for the Consumer
Avita Cream
All medicines may cause side effects, but many people have no, or minor, side effects. Check with your doctor if any of these most COMMON side effects persist or become bothersome when using Avita Cream:
Seek medical attention right away if any of these SEVERE side effects occur when using Avita Cream:Redness, peeling, or feeling of warmth; sensitivity to sunlight; skin irritation; stinging at application site.
Severe allergic reactions (rash; hives; itching; difficulty breathing; tightness in the chest; swelling of the mouth, face, lips, or tongue); severe redness, swelling, blistering, or crusting of the skin.
This is not a complete list of all side effects that may occur. If you have questions about side effects, contact your health care provider. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. To report side effects to the appropriate agency, please read the Guide to Reporting Problems to FDA.
Avita Gel
All medicines may cause side effects, but many people have no, or minor, side effects. Check with your doctor if any of these most COMMON side effects persist or become bothersome when using Avita Gel:
Seek medical attention right away if any of these SEVERE side effects occur when using Avita Gel:Redness, peeling at application site; sensitivity to sunlight; skin irritation; warmth or stinging at application site.
Severe allergic reactions (rash; hives; itching; difficulty breathing; tightness in the chest; swelling of the mouth, face, lips, or tongue); severe redness, peeling, swelling, blistering, or crusting of the skin.
This is not a complete list of all side effects that may occur. If you have questions about side effects, contact your health care provider. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. To report side effects to the appropriate agency, please read the Guide to Reporting Problems to FDA.
TopAvita Side Effects - for the Professional
Avita
The skin of certain sensitive individuals may become excessively red, edematous, blistered, or crusted. If these effects occur, the medication should either be discontinued until the integrity of the skin is restored, or the medication dosing frequency should be adjusted temporarily to a level the patient can tolerate. However, efficacy has not been established for lower dosing frequencies. True contact allergy to topical tretinoin is rarely encountered.Temporary hyper- or hypopigmentation has been reported with repeated application of Avita® Gel. Some individuals have been reported to have heightened susceptibility to sunlight while under treatment with Avita® Gel. Adverse effects of Avita® Gel have been reversible upon discontinuation of therapy.
TopSide Effects by Body System - for Healthcare Professionals
Dermatologic
A severe cutaneous reaction was reported in a patient who had an ice pack placed over an area treated with topical tretinoin. The area became pigmented and indurated, and the pigmentation persisted for an extensive length of time.
Dermatologic side effects are the most frequently reported side effects with the use of tretinoin topical. In double-blind, vehicle-controlled studies involving 339 patients who applied tretinoin topical 0.02% to their faces, adverse reactions associated with the use of tretinoin topical were limited primarily to the skin. Almost all patients reported one or more local reactions such as peeling, dry skin, burning, stinging, erythema, and pruritus. In 24% of all study patients, skin irritation was reported that was either severe (about 7%), led to temporary discontinuation of tretinoin topical 0.02% (about 20%), or led to use of a mild topical corticosteroid. About 5% of patients using tretinoin topical 0.02%, compared to less than 1% of the control patients, had sufficiently severe local irritation to warrant short-term use of mild topical corticosteroids to alleviate local irritation. About 4% of patients had to discontinue use of tretinoin topical because of adverse reactions. Tretinoin may induce photosensitivity in some individuals, as well as an increased susceptibility to irritation from wind, cold, and dryness.
Local
Local side effects including a retinoid dermatitis has been reported to occur frequently at the areas treated with topical tretinoin and is characterized by erythema, dryness, scaling, pruritus, and variable degrees of irritation.
Local reaction is commonly observed during the initial phase of therapy, but may not appear until as late as ten weeks into treatment. The dermatitis generally subsides with prolonged use of the medication, although in some cases may require a dosage adjustment or discontinuation of therapy. True contact dermatitis has been reported and confirmed with patch testing and leukocyte migration inhibition studies, but is uncommon. Rarely, there may be temporary hyper- or hypopigmentation following repeated applications.
Ocular
Ocular side effects including ectropions may develop infrequently and are reversible. A transient and harmless stinging of the eye may occur when tretinoin is applied onto the surrounding skin, generally lasting about 30 to 60 seconds.
Hepatic
Hepatic side effects including reversible, clinically insignificant changes in liver function tests have been reported following both oral and topical administration of tretinoin. These abnormalities include elevations in serum bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, and glutamic-pyruvic transaminase.
Nervous system
Nervous system side effects including a case of neurotoxicity in a patient with liver disease have been reported.
The patient developed neurological side effects following 4 weeks of tretinoin administration. Symptoms included headache, memory loss, truncal ataxia, and dysarthria, all of which improved upon temporary discontinuation of medication and recurred when the patient resumed usage. Upon withdrawal of medication a second time, the symptoms resolved within 4 weeks.
Genitourinary
Estrogen levels appeared not to have been affected.
Genitourinary side effects including an isolated case of vaginal bleeding related to tretinoin use has been reported in a post-menopausal woman and confirmed upon rechallenge.
TopMore Avita resources
- Avita Prescribing Information (FDA)
- Avita Topical Advanced Consumer (Micromedex) - Includes Dosage Information
- Avita Cream MedFacts Consumer Leaflet (Wolters Kluwer)
- Atralin Consumer Overview
- Refissa Prescribing Information (FDA)
- Renova Emollient Cream MedFacts Consumer Leaflet (Wolters Kluwer)
- Renova Consumer Overview
- Retin-A Prescribing Information (FDA)
- Tretin-X Cream MedFacts Consumer Leaflet (Wolters Kluwer)
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