We use essential cookies (authentication, your saved goals/stack) by default. With your permission we'll also enable privacy-respecting analytics (Vercel Web Analytics, anonymous load-time metrics) and error-replay diagnostics (Sentry — DOM snapshots only when an error fires) so we can fix bugs faster. Learn more about cookies
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 Lactic Acid (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. Leave-on lactic acid is used at roughly 5-12% (lower for hydration, higher for exfoliation); professional peels use higher strengths. Apply to clean skin, often at night, building frequency as tolerated, with daily sunscreen. There is no oral or systemic dose — it is not ingested. This library does not provide an ingestion protocol.
evening
Leave-on lotion or serum (≈5-12% lactic acid)
Throughout
8-12 weeks
Throughout
First weeks
Throughout
2-8 weeks
8-22 weeks
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
Topical 8% glycolic acid and 8% L-lactic acid creams for the treatment of photodamaged skin. A double-blind vehicle-controlled clinical trial.
Arch Dermatol (1996) · Rct · n=74
22-week double-blind vehicle-controlled trial (n=74): 8% L-lactic acid cream twice daily improved facial photodamage in 71% vs 40% with vehicle (P<.05)
Effect of lactic acid isomers on keratinocyte ceramide synthesis, stratum corneum lipid levels and stratum corneum barrier function.
Arch Dermatol Res (1996) · In vitro
Lactic acid stimulated keratinocyte ceramide biosynthesis in vitro, L-isomer far more potent (300% vs 100%)
Applications of hydroxy acids: classification, mechanisms, and photoactivity.
Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol (2010) · Review
FDA/NIH review of alpha-, beta-, poly-, and bionic hydroxy acids across photoaging, pigmentation, acne, and ichthyosis
Adapalene has a higher evidence score (9/10 vs 6/10) and wins in 2 of 3 categories.
No known interactions between Adapalene and Lactic Acid (topical) have been documented in our database. However, always consult a healthcare provider before combining supplements.