Rosacea is a chronicinflammatory skin condition predominantly affecting the central face and most often starts between the age of 30–60 years.
Rosacea is common and is characterised by persistent facial redness. It typically has a relapsing and remitting course, with symptoms controlled by lifestyle measures, general skin care, medications, and procedural interventions.
Papulopustular rosacea on the cheeks
Erythematotelangiectatic and papulopustular rosacea on the cheeks
Papular rosacea on the cheeks
Telangiectatic vessels in a rinophyma shown on dermoscopy(RO-patient4)
Rhinophyma and papular rosacea on the chin (RO-patient2)
Rosacea is estimated to affect around 5% of adults worldwide. Although rosacea is often thought to affect women more than men, studies have revealed an approximately equal genderdistribution.
Rosacea typically presents after the age of 30 and becomes more prevalent with age. However, it can occur at any age and occasionally presents in children. Although rosacea can affect anyone, it is more common in those with fair skin, blue eyes, and those of Celtic or North European descent. It may be more difficult and under-recognised in patients with skin of colour.
Rosacea has been associated with depression, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, anxiety disorder, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, migraine, rheumatoid arthritis, Helicobacter pyloriinfection, ulcerative colitis, and dementia.
What causes rosacea?
The pathogenesis of rosacea is thought to be multifactorial and includes:
Geneticsusceptibility
Association with single nucleotidepolymorphisms related to the class II major histocompatibility complex.
Altered microbiome of the skin and gut
Bacterial overgrowth of the small intestine, Helicobacter pylori infection, and increased density of Demodex folliculorum and Staphylococcus epidermidis on the skin may play a role in skin inflammation.
Dysregulation of the immune response may lead to excessive inflammation, vasodilation, lymphatic dilatation, and angiogenesis.
Neurocutaneous mechanisms
Triggers include ultraviolet (UV) radiation, temperature change, exercise, spicy foods, alcohol, psychological stress, air pollution, and tobacco smoking. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) may play a role in flushing and erythema.
Impaired skin barrier
Affected skin displays features indicating skin barrier impairment, allowing bacterial colonisation and inflammation.
Dominant T-helper (Th)1/Th17 gene expression in all features of rosacea.
Increased Th17 expression can increase levels of cathelicidin LL-37 in keratinocytes and drive further inflammation.
The most significant environmental trigger is UV radiation; affected skin is more sensitive to exposure. UV radiation can damage the dermis and increase skin inflammation.
How do clinical features vary in differing types of skin?
Rosacea is diagnosed more frequently in fair-skinned patients of Celtic and Northern European descent.
It may be harder to identify key features of rosacea in patients with skin of colour. These features are likely under-recognised and rosacea may be underdiagnosed in these patients.
Negative psychosocial effects such as increased anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, and social isolation
Trigger avoidance leading to lifestyle limitations.
How is rosacea diagnosed?
Rosacea is diagnosed clinically in the majority of cases. Diagnosis is made according to diagnostic and major criteria recommended by the 2017 global ROSacea COnsensus (ROSCO) panel. This requires one diagnostic criterion or two major criteria to be fulfilled.
In patients with darker phototypes where erythema and telangiectasia (visible blood vessels) is more difficult to visualise, greater emphasis may be placed on other major and minor features.
Diagnostic criteria
Persistent centrofacial erythema associated with periodic intensification by potential trigger factors
Phymatous changes.
Major criteria (must occur in centrofacial distribution)
Flushing/transient centrofacial erythema
Inflammatory papules and pustules
Telangiectasia — visible blood vessels (excluding nasal alar telangiectases, which are common in adults)
Although there is no cure for rosacea, symptoms can be managed with the following lifestyle measures, medical, and procedural interventions.
General measures
All patients with rosacea should receive education on general skincare and lifestyle measures.
Lifestyle advice
Encourage patients to record a symptom diary to aid the identification of triggers:
Common triggers include spicy food, hot/cold temperatures (hot baths), exercise, sun exposure, cosmetic products, medications (those that cause vasodilation), alcohol, fruits and vegetables, dairy, marinated meat products
Provides broad-spectrum UV radiation and visible light protection
May be better tolerated than chemical sunscreens
Avoid exfoliants
Avoid alcohol-based topical products
Avoid use of topical steroids as they may aggravate the condition
Cosmetics with a green tint are useful to minimise the appearance of redness.
Psychosocial considerations
Assess the patient’s psychosocial burden of disease and consider referral for psychological support where necessary.
Specific measures
Existing treatments for rosacea can be very effective — however, they often target only one feature. This means that a combination of therapies are required where patients present with multiple features and in severe rosacea.
Many of the following treatments are first-line therapies recommended by the 2019 ROSCO panel:
Transient erythema (flushing)
Alpha-adrenergic agonists (topical brimonidine, topical oxymetazoline) — they are often used infrequently for special occasions only, as persistent use may result in rebound flushing on discontinuation
If clinically non-inflamed: physical modalities to remove excess tissue and reshape the structures (eg, ablative CO2 laser, erbium laser, radiofrequency, surgical debulking).
Although rosacea is not a life-threatening condition, it is a chronic disease that requires long-term management of relapsing and remitting symptoms. Complete resolution of clinical features has been shown to prolong time to symptom relapse and have greater positive impact on quality of life compared with incomplete resolution.
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