# Extemporaneous dermatological compounding in hospital pharmacies, Northwest Ethiopia

**Authors:** Ephrem Mebratu Dagnew, Ashenafi Kibret Sendekie, Wondale Tsega, Biset Asrade Mekonnen, Melese Getachew

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1486936 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2025-05-30

## TL;DR

This study examines the common dermatological conditions and compounded medications used in hospitals in Northwest Ethiopia to improve pharmaceutical care practices.

## Contribution

The study provides insights into the most prescribed compounded dermatological products and highlights the need for standardized compounding guidelines.

## Key findings

- Melasma, acne vulgaris, acute dermatitis, and rosacea were the most common conditions for which compounded products were prescribed.
- Semisolid preparations containing two or more active ingredients were the most frequently compounded formulations.
- Salicylic acid was the most commonly used active ingredient, with Vaseline and Nivea cream as the primary excipients.

## Abstract

Dermatological problems are among the leading causes of hospital visits in Ethiopia. Extemporaneous compounded products are currently used by many patients with different disorders. The aim of the study was to evaluate the most commonly prescribed extemporaneously compounded products compounding practice and applicability of compounding guidelines at five randomly selected hospitals in Northwest Ethiopia.

A hospital-based multicenter descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted by retrospectively analyzing prescription records for dermatological compounding from January to April 2023. A total of 423 prescriptions from hospital pharmacies were systematically selected. Data related to skin condition patterns, product selection, and dosage form types were extracted using a semi-structured data extraction tool and analyzed using SPSS version 25.0 at a significance level of 5%.

A total of 423 prescriptions containing dermatological products for compounding were analyzed. Most patients were female (82.1%) and aged 30–64 years (46.3%). Melasma (82.9%), acne vulgaris (68.6%), acute dermatitis (63.27%), and Rosacea (61.54%) were the four top dermatological diseases for which compounding preparations were prescribed. More than half of the prescriptions (56.26%) contained a combination of two drugs. Most compounded dosage form was semisolid preparations (95.98%), while the remaining 17 (4.02%) were liquids. Salicylic acid (35.39%) was the most frequently prescribed active ingredient, followed by Clobetasone (13.03%) and Betamethasone (10.01%). Vaseline (47.62%) and Nivea cream (44.3%) were the most commonly used excipients for compound preparations. Hydroquinone (4%) with Nivea cream (30gm) (17.0%), followed by salicylic acid (5%) + Betamethasone (75 g) + Vaseline (20 g) (10.6%) were the most commonly prescribed dermatological formulations.

Dermatological disease is more prevalent in the study area. and extemporaneous compounding is a common element of pharmaceutical care. Extemporaneous and topical semisolid preparations containing two or more active ingredients are the most widely compounded and prescribed products. This study suggests the application of good manufacturing practices and componding guidelines for extemporaneous compounding of dermatological formulations to ensure efficacy, quality, and safety.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Salicylic acid (PubChem CID 338), Clobetasone (PubChem CID 71387), Betamethasone (PubChem CID 3003), Hydroquinone (PubChem CID 785)
- **Diseases:** Acne vulgaris (MONDO:0011438), Rosacea (MONDO:0006604)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Dermatological (MESH:D000168), Melasma (MESH:D008548), Rosacea (MESH:D012393), acute dermatitis (MESH:D000208), acne vulgaris (MESH:D000152)
- **Chemicals:** Clobetasone (-), Vaseline (MESH:D010577), Hydroquinone (MESH:C031927), Betamethasone (MESH:D001623), Salicylic acid (MESH:D020156)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12162544/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12162544