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Head-to-head evidence comparison — which supplement is right for you?
Adapalene wins 2 of 3 categories. Both are solid choices — the best pick depends on your specific goals.
Verdict
Mostly mechanism / observational
Top outcomes
Verdict
Mostly mechanism / observational
Top outcomes
Shared outcomes (1)
Outcomes where both Adapalene and Ceramides (topical) have evidence — compare verdict strength side-by-side.
Topical use. Adapalene 0.1% (OTC) or 0.3% (prescription) gel/cream is applied as a thin layer to the whole affected area once daily, usually at night, starting every other day and building to nightly as tolerated. Full benefit takes ~8-12 weeks. There is no oral or systemic dose — it is not ingested. It is most effective combined with benzoyl peroxide. This library does not provide an ingestion protocol.
evening
Adapalene 0.1% gel/cream (OTC), applied nightly to the whole area
Topical cosmetic only. Ceramide-containing moisturizers are applied liberally to clean skin once or twice daily (and after bathing, to damp skin, to lock in water). There is no oral, injectable, or systemic dose in this context — it is not ingested. This library does not provide an ingestion protocol.
any
Ceramide-containing cream or lotion (with cholesterol and fatty acids)
Throughout
8-12 weeks
Throughout
First weeks
Throughout
1-4 weeks
Ongoing
Throughout
A comparison of the efficacy and tolerability of adapalene 0.1% gel versus tretinoin 0.025% gel in patients with acne vulgaris: a meta-analysis of five randomized trials.
Br J Dermatol (1998) · Meta analysis · n=900
Meta-analysis of five randomized investigator-blind trials (900 patients) in mild-to-moderate acne
Adapalene-benzoyl peroxide, a fixed-dose combination for the treatment of acne vulgaris: results of a multicenter, randomized double-blind, controlled study.
J Am Acad Dermatol (2007) · Rct · n=517
Pivotal 12-week double-blind RCT (n=517) of adapalene-BPO vs adapalene, BPO, or vehicle
Topical preparations for the treatment of mild-to-moderate acne vulgaris: systematic review and network meta-analysis.
Br J Dermatol (2021) · Systematic review
Systematic review and network meta-analysis of 40 trials (18,089 participants) of topical acne treatments
Efficacy of Pseudo-Ceramide-Containing Steroid Lamellar Cream in Patients with Mild to Moderate Atopic Dermatitis: A Randomized, Double-Blind Study.
Dermatol Ther (Heidelb) (2022) · Rct · n=34
Randomized double-blind study (n=34): a pseudo-ceramide cream formed a lamellar structure (~8.2 nm spacing) mimicking the human stratum corneum
Decreased level of ceramides in stratum corneum of atopic dermatitis: an etiologic factor in atopic dry skin?
J Invest Dermatol (1991) · Case control · n=35
Lesional atopic-dermatitis skin showed a marked reduction in stratum-corneum ceramide content versus age-matched healthy controls
Attenuation of Atopic Dermatitis in Newborns, Infants, and Children With Prescription Treatment and Ceramide-Containing Skin Care: A Systematic Literature Review and Consensus.
J Drugs Dermatol (2024) · Systematic review
Systematic literature review plus modified-Delphi consensus on ceramide-containing skin care for pediatric atopic dermatitis
Adapalene has a higher evidence score (9/10 vs 6/10) and wins in 2 of 3 categories.
No known interactions between Adapalene and Ceramides (topical) have been documented in our database. However, always consult a healthcare provider before combining supplements.