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Head-to-head evidence comparison — which supplement is right for you?
Azelaic Acid and Benzoyl Peroxide are closely matched across evidence, studies, and safety.
Verdict
Mostly mechanism / observational
Top outcomes
Verdict
Mostly mechanism / observational
Top outcomes
Shared outcomes (1)
Outcomes where both Azelaic Acid and Benzoyl Peroxide have evidence — compare verdict strength side-by-side.
Topical only. OTC cosmetic azelaic acid is typically around 10%; prescription strengths are 15% gel/foam (rosacea) and 20% cream (acne), applied as a thin layer to clean skin once or twice daily. There is no oral, injectable, or systemic dose. For rosacea or persistent acne, the prescription form under a clinician is the evidence-based route. This library does not provide an ingestion protocol.
any
Leave-on topical gel, foam, or cream (OTC ~10%, or prescription 15-20%)
Topical OTC use. Benzoyl peroxide is used at 2.5-10% in gels, creams, and washes, applied to acne-prone areas once or twice daily; lower strengths (2.5-5%) are usually as effective as 10% with less irritation. There is no oral or systemic dose — it is not ingested. It is often combined with a retinoid (e.g. adapalene) for greater effect. This library does not provide an ingestion protocol.
any
Leave-on gel/cream (2.5-5%) or a fixed combination with a retinoid
Throughout
4-15 weeks
8-24 weeks
4-12 weeks
Throughout
4-12 weeks
Throughout
First weeks
Efficacy and safety of azelaic acid (15%) gel as a new treatment for papulopustular rosacea: results from two vehicle-controlled, randomized phase III studies.
J Am Acad Dermatol (2003) · Rct · n=664
Two double-blind, vehicle-controlled phase III RCTs (664 patients total) of 15% azelaic acid gel twice daily for moderate papulopustular rosacea
A comparison of 15% azelaic acid gel and 0.75% metronidazole gel in the topical treatment of papulopustular rosacea: results of a randomized trial.
Arch Dermatol (2003) · Rct · n=251
Multicenter, double-blind, randomized head-to-head trial in 251 patients with moderate papulopustular rosacea over 15 weeks
Interventions for rosacea.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2015) · Systematic review
Cochrane review of 106 RCTs (13,631 participants) of rosacea treatments with GRADE quality assessment
Topical benzoyl peroxide for acne.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2020) · Systematic review
Pooled 120 RCTs (29,592 participants); BPO more effective than placebo/no treatment for participant-reported improvement (RR 1.27, 95% CI 1.12 to 1.45)
Efficacy of topical treatments for mild-to-moderate acne: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized control trials.
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol (2025) · Meta analysis
Network meta-analysis of 35 RCTs (33,472 participants) comparing nine topical acne agents
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
517 subjects randomized double-blind to adapalene-BPO, adapalene, BPO, or vehicle for 12 weeks
Both Azelaic Acid and Benzoyl Peroxide are closely matched — the best choice depends on your specific health goals.
For clearer skin (acne), Benzoyl Peroxide has a higher relevance score (85 vs 70).
No known interactions between Azelaic Acid and Benzoyl Peroxide have been documented in our database. However, always consult a healthcare provider before combining supplements.