Evaluation of the efficacy of novel topical antifungal agents against dermatophytes in North India: A prospective study
Tanya Sachan, Prashant Gupta, Swastika Suvirya, Parul Verma, Raj Kumar Kalyan, Gopa Banerjee

TL;DR
This study tested new topical antifungal drugs against common fungal infections in North India and found they could be effective treatments.
Contribution
The study provides new data on the efficacy of novel topical antifungals against dermatophytes in an Indian context.
Findings
Efinaconazole, tavaborole, luliconazole, and sertaconazole showed low minimum inhibitory concentrations against dermatophytes.
Luliconazole had the lowest epidemiological cutoff values among the tested antifungals.
The drugs demonstrated potential for developing new topical treatments for fungal infections.
Abstract
Dermatophytosis, a fungal infection targeting keratinized tissue, is caused by dermatophytes, commonly affecting skin, hair, and nails. Prevalent in tropical regions, such as India, its treatment typically utilizes systemic and topical antifungal medications. Despite ample research on oral antifungals, data on the susceptibility of topical treatments, especially in India, where they are prevalent, remains scarce. This study aimed to investigate the antifungal susceptibility of efinaconazole, tavaborole, luliconazole, and sertaconazole against dermatophytes isolated from cases of dermatophytosis. Samples of all the clinically diagnosed cases of dermatophytosis were subjected to microscopy and culture. All 204 dermatophytes, namely Trichophyton rubrum (n=90), Trichophyton mentagrophytes/interdigitale (n=69), Trichophyton tonsurans (n=44), and Epidermophyton floccosum (n=1) were subjected…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNail Diseases and Treatments · Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases · Fungal Biology and Applications
