Salicylic acid preparations for treating warts


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Examples


Brand Name Chemical Name
Wart-Offsalicylic acid

Mild salicylic acid preparations are available as nonprescription paints, creams, or plaster patches for home treatment.


How It Works


Salicylic acid:

  • Softens the skin layers that form a wart so that the wart can be rubbed off with a pumice stone or file.
  • Repeatedly irritates a wart, which is thought to trigger an immune system response. A heightened immune response fights the human papillomavirus that causes wart growth.

Why It Is Used


Salicylic acid is the home treatment most often used for eliminating warts. It:

  • Is an inexpensive and safe home treatment.
  • Causes minimal or no pain.
  • May only be effective when used regularly over a period of time.

Salicylic acid should not be used:


How Well It Works


Nonprescription salicylic acid is as effective as or more effective than other treatments, with minimal risk and pain.1

  • A recent review of research suggests that salicylic acid is a safe treatment that effectively eliminates warts up to 75% of the time. By comparison, placebo or no treatment produced an approximate clearance rate of 50%.2
  • There is currently no evidence that cryotherapy is any more effective than salicylic acid.1

Side Effects


Salicylic acid can irritate or damage healthy skin surrounding the wart. As a prevention measure, cover the surrounding skin with a doughnut-shaped pad or bandage when applying salicylic acid. If you experience discomfort with salicylic acid treatment, try applying it less often.

Rarely, salicylic acid treatment causes scarring.

See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference is not available in all systems.)


What To Think About


  • Avoid getting salicylic acid on your unaffected skin. Salicylic acid should touch only the wart.
  • Dead tissue contains living wart virus, so dispose of the dead skin carefully. The pumice stone or file will also have living wart virus on it. Don't use the file or pumice stone for any other purpose, or you may spread the virus.
  • If treatment causes the area to become too tender, stop using the medication for 2 to 3 days.
  • If your warts do not go away after 2 to 3 months of treatment with salicylic acid, or if they recur, consider a stronger preparation, another type of treatment, or no treatment.

Complete the new medication information form (PDF) (What is a PDF document?) to help you understand this medication.


References


Citations

  1. Gibbs S, et al. (2006). Local treatments for cutaneous warts. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (1). Oxford: Update Software.

  2. Bigby M, et al. (2005). Warts. Clinical Evidence (14): 2091–2103.


Credits


Author Sabra L. Katz-Wise
Author Ralph Poore
Editor Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA
Associate Editor Pat Truman
Primary Medical Reviewer Adam Husney, MD

- Family Medicine
Primary Medical Reviewer Kathleen Romito, MD

- Family Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer Randall D. Burr, MD

- Dermatology
Last Updated October 20, 2006

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Last updated: October 20, 2006
Author: Ralph Poore
Reviewed By: Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine, Randall D. Burr, MD - Dermatology
Editors: Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA, Pat Truman

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