Special Considerations for Peri-oral (Peri-orificial) Dermatitis
Eye-area rashes, children, and pregnancy-safe treatment choices (Melbourne: Ivanhoe + Diamond Creek)
Peri-oral (peri-orificial) dermatitis can be straightforward — until it involves the eye area, occurs in children, or needs a pregnancy/breastfeeding-safe plan. In these situations, the wrong “quick fix” (especially topical steroids) can prolong the cycle. (1–3)
[Book a combined appointment]
20 minutes with Dr Chris Irwin + 40 minutes with an expert dermal therapist
Diagnosis + prescriptions (if needed) + a safe, staged routine designed for your situation.
Key takeaways
- Around the eyes, we usually prioritise steroid-sparing strategies and very gentle routines. (1–3)
- In children, peri-orificial dermatitis can look different (including granulomatous variants) and oral options differ by age. (2,4,5)
- In pregnancy/breastfeeding, we tailor treatment to options with the best safety profile and avoid specific drug classes (especially tetracyclines). (1–3)
Jump links
- When the rash is around the eyes
- Children and peri-orificial dermatitis
- Pregnancy and breastfeeding
- When to seek urgent review
- FAQs
- Book
When the rash is around the eyes
Peri-orificial dermatitis can affect the skin around the eyes (peri-ocular involvement). This area is delicate, and irritation escalates quickly.
What matters most
- Avoid steroid dependence: steroid creams can temporarily improve redness, but are a common driver of the rebound cycle in peri-orificial dermatitis. (1–3)
- Low-irritant routine: the goal is comfort and stability, not “active skincare”. (2,3)
- Careful product choices: eye-area skin often reacts to fragranced or multi-ingredient products.
What we do in clinic
In your combined appointment, we focus on:
- confirming it’s peri-orificial dermatitis (and not a contact dermatitis pattern or another overlap) (2,3)
- identifying the trigger source (including “hidden” steroid exposure) (1–3)
- selecting an eye-area-appropriate plan that avoids restarting the steroid cycle (1–3)
If eye symptoms are significant (pain, light sensitivity, marked swelling, vision change), we treat this as a priority problem (see “urgent review” below).
Children and peri-orificial dermatitis
Children can develop peri-orificial dermatitis, often after facial steroid use for “eczema” or nonspecific rashes. (1–3)
How it can look in kids
- The distribution can be around the mouth, nose and eyes. (2,4)
- Some children develop a granulomatous variant (often described as monomorphic skin-coloured to yellow-brown papules), which can look quite different from adult peri-oral dermatitis. (4,5)
Treatment differences in children
- Trigger removal still comes first (especially stopping topical steroids and simplifying skincare). (1–3)
- Oral antibiotic options differ by age; for example, tetracyclines are not used in younger children, and alternatives may be considered. (3)
- There is evidence supporting topical calcineurin inhibitors as a well-tolerated option in paediatric peri-orificial dermatitis cohorts. (6)
Because children’s skin is more reactive, the dermal therapist component of the combined appointment is especially useful: the routine needs to be simple enough that parents can implement it consistently.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding
Peri-orificial dermatitis is very treatable in pregnancy and breastfeeding, but the medication shortlist is different.
Principles
- Start with trigger reset + gentle routine (often the most important step). (1–3)
- Use topical options that are commonly recommended when pregnancy limits oral choices. (1,2)
- Avoid antibiotic classes that are contraindicated in pregnancy and breastfeeding (particularly tetracyclines). (3)
What we do in clinic
Dr Irwin will:
- confirm the diagnosis and severity
- build a staged plan that prioritises symptom control while staying within pregnancy/breastfeeding safety limits (1–3)
- coordinate the routine and product strategy with your dermal therapist so you are not “trial-and-erroring” at home
When to seek urgent review
Book promptly (or seek urgent assessment) if you have:
- significant eyelid swelling, severe pain, marked light sensitivity, or any visual change
- rapidly spreading rash with crusting or signs of infection
- a severe rebound after stopping steroids that is pushing you toward restarting them
- pregnancy/breastfeeding with a worsening rash and uncertainty about what is safe
FAQs
Can peri-orificial dermatitis occur around the eyes without mouth involvement?
Yes, it can. Distribution varies, and eye-area involvement needs extra caution with product and medication choices. (2,3)
Is peri-orificial dermatitis common in children?
It occurs in children and can present differently than in adults. (2,4)
What if I’m pregnant and I need results quickly?
We focus on a strict trigger reset, a low-irritant routine, and pregnancy-appropriate topical options. Oral options are used selectively and depend on safety and severity. (1–3)
Book
If your rash is around the eyes, affects a child, or you’re pregnant/breastfeeding, you’ll usually do best with a plan that’s designed for your situation — not generic “acne” or “eczema” advice.
[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.DermNet NZ. Periorificial dermatitis in children. (Accessed 2026). https://dermnetnz.org/topics/periorificial-dermatitis-in-children
5.Chakraborty AS, et al. Childhood granulomatous periorificial dermatitis. (Review). (2023; accessed 2026). https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10718105/
6.Ollech A, et al. Topical calcineurin inhibitors for pediatric periorificial dermatitis. (Cohort study). J Am Acad Dermatol. 2020. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32032693/