Peri-oral / Peri-orificial Dermatitis Treatment Plan
Peri-oral (Peri-orificial) Dermatitis Treatment Plan
A staged, practical approach for reactive facial skin (Melbourne: Ivanhoe + Diamond Creek)
Peri-oral / peri-orificial dermatitis improves fastest when treatment is structured and consistent — not when it’s chased with lots of new products. The core idea is simple: remove the fuel → calm inflammation → rebuild a tolerant routine. (1–3)
[Book a combined appointment]
20 minutes with Dr Chris Irwin + 40 minutes with an expert dermal therapist
Diagnosis + prescriptions (if needed) + a step-by-step skincare plan you can actually follow.
Key takeaways
- The biggest mistake is treating this like acne (over-cleansing, acids, benzoyl peroxide, frequent product switching). (2,3)
- Topical steroids often create a cycle: improves briefly → rebounds worse → becomes persistent. (1–3)
- Most patients do best with a 4–12 week plan with clear milestones and a maintenance strategy. (2,3)
Jump links
- Step 1: The reset (“Zero Therapy”)
- Step 2: Prescription options (topicals)
- Step 3: Oral options (when needed)
- Step 4: Rebuild and maintain (prevent recurrence)
- Timeline: what to expect week by week (and how to speed settling)
- Common pitfalls (why people get stuck)
- When to contact us sooner
- FAQs
- Book
Step 1 — The reset (“Zero Therapy”)
This step removes the most common drivers and gives your skin a chance to settle.
Stop these (temporarily, unless Dr Irwin advises otherwise)
- Topical steroid creams on the face (including “mild” hydrocortisone). (1–3)
- Heavy/occlusive moisturisers and balms (thick creams, ointments, facial oils). (1,2)
- Foundation and heavy concealers over the rash (occlusion can keep it going). (1,2)
- Scrubs and exfoliants (physical exfoliation and cleansing brushes). (2,3)
- Strong actives during an active flare (retinoids, strong acids, benzoyl peroxide on the area). (2,3)
What you can do during the reset
- Cleanse gently once or twice daily with a mild, fragrance-free cleanser (or just lukewarm water if very reactive). (2,3)
- Use a minimal, non-occlusive moisturiser only if the skin feels uncomfortably tight or cracked (your dermal therapist will guide this).
- If sunscreen stings during an active flare, use hat/shade short-term and reintroduce a gentle option once calmer.
A crucial note about steroid withdrawal
If you’ve been using topical steroids, stopping them can cause a temporary flare (redder, bumpier, more uncomfortable) before improvement. This is expected — restarting steroids usually prolongs the cycle. (1–3)
Step 2 — Prescription options (topicals)
Topicals are chosen to calm inflammation without restarting the steroid cycle.
Steroid-sparing anti-inflammatory creams (often first-line)
Non-steroid anti-inflammatory options are commonly used for peri-orificial dermatitis, particularly when steroid exposure is part of the story. (2,3)
Anti-inflammatory / anti-microbial topicals
Depending on your pattern, we may use additional targeted topicals commonly used for peri-orificial dermatitis to reduce inflammation and bumpiness. (2,3)
How we choose:
Dr Irwin tailors your plan based on distribution (around mouth vs eyes), severity, sensitivity, pregnancy considerations, and whether acne/rosacea overlap is present.
Step 3 — Oral options (when needed)
If the rash is more extensive, persistent, or very inflamed, we may recommend a time-limited oral anti-inflammatory antibiotic course (often 4–12 weeks depending on response). (2,3)
Oral therapy is typically considered when:
- the rash is spreading beyond a small area
- there is significant burning/stinging and ongoing new bumps
- you’ve already done a proper reset and are still stuck
Step 4 — Rebuild and maintain (prevent recurrence)
Once the rash is settling, relapse prevention becomes the priority.
The “one change at a time” rule
Reintroduce skincare products slowly (one new product every 5–7 days) so you can identify triggers.
Maintenance plan (what we aim for)
- A stable, minimal routine you can keep long-term
- A clear plan for early flares (so you don’t panic-switch products)
- Avoidance of facial steroid “quick fixes” (the most common relapse driver). (1–3)
This is where the 40-minute dermal therapist component is a major advantage: the plan is personalised to what you’ll actually use, not just what sounds ideal.
Timeline: what to expect week by week (and how to speed settling)
Everyone varies, but typical milestones look like this:
Days 1–10
- Possible worsening if steroids were used
- Skin feels reactive; the goal is stability, not perfection. (1–3)
Weeks 2–4
- Fewer new bumps
- Less burning/stinging
- Redness begins to settle gradually. (2,3)
If you need quicker visible settling in the first 4 weeks:
We can add LED phototherapy as a supportive “calm-the-inflammation” layer while your medical plan and trigger reset take effect. Evidence from LED studies in inflammatory facial conditions demonstrates meaningful reductions in inflammatory lesion counts over short courses (including within ~4 weeks), and systematic reviews support at least twice-weekly regimens over 4–8 weeks for reducing inflammation and lesion count. (4,5)
Weeks 4–8
- Consolidation phase (most visible improvement accumulates here). (2,3)
Weeks 8–12
- Maintenance routine is finalised
- Focus shifts to preventing recurrence and improving tolerance. (2,3)
Common pitfalls (why people get stuck)
- Restarting steroids for quick relief (then rebounding again). (1–3)
- Treating like acne (over-washing, acids, benzoyl peroxide on the area). (2,3)
- Switching products too often (“trying to fix it” with a new active every few days)
- Covering it daily with heavy foundation without a stable base routine
When to contact us sooner
- Rapid worsening, crusting, or painful fissuring
- Significant peri-ocular involvement (eyelid swelling, marked irritation)
- You’re pregnant/breastfeeding and unsure what’s safe
- You’ve stopped steroids and feel tempted to restart — we can guide the transition plan
FAQs
Do I have to stop moisturiser completely?
Not always. Many people do best with less moisturiser, not no moisturiser. The key is choosing a minimal, non-occlusive option and using it strategically. (2,3)
Will I need antibiotics?
Not always. Mild to moderate cases often settle with a proper reset plus a targeted topical plan. Oral therapy is for more persistent or widespread disease. (2,3)
Why can’t I just use steroid cream for a few days?
Because peri-orificial dermatitis commonly follows a steroid cycle: temporary improvement followed by rebound and persistence when stopped. (1–3)
Book
If you’re stuck in the cycle of peri-mouth bumps, burning, and product intolerance — especially if steroid creams have been part of the story — a staged plan can make a real difference.
[Book a combined appointment]
20 minutes with Dr Chris Irwin + 40 minutes with an expert dermal therapist
Ivanhoe: Unit 1, 1065 Heidelberg Road, Ivanhoe VIC 3079
Diamond Creek: Shop 12, 67 Main Hurstbridge Road, Diamond Creek VIC 3089
References
1.Australasian College of Dermatologists. Perioral dermatitis. (Accessed 2026). https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/atoz/perioral-dermatitis/
2.DermNet NZ. Periorificial dermatitis. (Accessed 2026). https://dermnetnz.org/topics/periorificial-dermatitis
3.Tolaymat L, Hall M. Perioral Dermatitis. StatPearls (NCBI Bookshelf). (Updated 2023; accessed 2026). https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK525968/
4.Jagdeo J, Austin E, Mamalis A, Wong C. Light-emitting diodes in dermatology: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Lasers Surg Med. 2018. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29356026/
5.Lee SY, You CE, Park MY. Blue and red light combination LED phototherapy for acne vulgaris in patients with skin phototype IV. Lasers Surg Med. 2007. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17111415/