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
A-F grade per outcome, combining overall evidence with goal-specific relevance. A = strong evidence; F = insufficient. Hover a badge for details.
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 time
Leave-on topical gel, foam, or cream (OTC ~10%, or prescription 15-20%)
Topical cosmetic. Cysteamine 5% cream is typically applied once daily to areas of melasma as a short-contact treatment (left on for ~15 minutes, then washed off) to limit odor and irritation, with daily sunscreen. There is no oral or systemic use in this context. This library does not provide an ingestion protocol.
Any time
Cysteamine 5% cream (short-contact application)
Throughout
4-15 weeks
8-24 weeks
Throughout
8-16 weeks
Throughout
Like what you see? Add these to your stack.
See how they work together through biological pathways.
Build Your StackWant to compare more supplements?