Latest News

OTC Supplement Linked to Hyperpigmentation


 

—The use of kratom, an opioid-like supplement widely available over the counter at convenience stores, smoke shops, and online, is resulting in emerging cases of hyperpigmentation, most often on the face and hands.

“This is something we will see more and more,” Heather Woolery-Lloyd, MD, director of the Skin of Color Division at the University of Miami Department of Dermatology, said at the Pigmentary Disorders Exchange Symposium. The key marker of this hyperpigmentation, she said, is that “it’s strongly photoaccentuated,” affecting areas exposed to the sun — but it also tends to spare the knuckles on patients’ hands.

Used Like an Opioid, But It’s Not Regulated

Kratom is a plant common in southeast Asia and is used as an analgesic. It’s marketed as a “legal opioid” or “legal high” and is sold in 2- or 3-ounce containers of extract or sold as a powder, Dr. Woolery-Lloyd said. The leaves may be boiled into a tea, smoked, chewed, or put into capsules, according to a case report published in February in the Journal of Integrative Dermatology. It is used worldwide and is not regulated in the United States.

“Many of our patients think kratom is a safe, herbal supplement” but often don’t know it can have several side effects and can be addictive, Dr. Woolery-Lloyd said. Its popularity is increasing as reflected by the number of posts related to kratom on social media platforms.

In the February case report, Shaina Patel, BA, and Nathaniel Phelan, MD, from Kansas City University, Kansas City, Missouri, wrote that side effects of kratom include drowsiness, tachycardia, vomiting, respiratory depression, and cardiac arrest, in addition to confusion and hallucinations.

Kratom also has many different effects on the psyche, Dr. Woolery-Lloyd said at the meeting. At low doses, it blocks the reuptake of norepinephrine, serotonin, and dopamine, producing a motivational effect, and at high doses, it creates an analgesic, calming effect. And people who chronically consume high doses of kratom may be susceptible to hyperpigmentation.

Kratom-associated hyperpigmentation should be considered as a diagnosis when evaluating patients for other drug-associated pigmentary disorders, “especially if pigment is photodistributed,” she said. “If you see new-onset hyperpigmentation or onset over several months and it’s very photoaccentuated, definitely ask about use of kratom.”

Case Reports Show Patterns of Presentation

A 2022 report from Landon R. Powell, BS, with the department of biology, Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington, and coauthors, published in JAAD Case Reports, noted that kratom use in the United States has increased dramatically. “As measured by call reports to the United States National Poison Data System, in 2011, there were 11 reported kratom exposures, and in the first 7 months of 2018, there were 357 reported exposures,” they wrote.

An estimated 1.7 million Americans aged ≥ 12 years said they had used kratom in the previous year, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration 2021 National Survey on Drug Use and Health.

In the case report, Mr. Powell and coauthors described a 54-year-old White male patient who had been using kratom for the previous four to five years to reduce opioid use. During this period, he consumed kratom powder mixed with orange juice three to four times a day. He presented with “diffuse hyperpigmented patches on his arms and face in a photodistributed manner, with notable sparing of the knuckles on both hands.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

Why it’s important for dermatologists to learn about JAK inhibitors
Federal Practitioner
JAK inhibitors show no excess cardiovascular safety signal in French nationwide cohort
Federal Practitioner
Picosecond laser applications continue to expand
Federal Practitioner
SPF is only the start when recommending sunscreens
Federal Practitioner
Tips, contraindications for superficial chemical peels reviewed
Federal Practitioner
Macular dermal hyperpigmentation: Treatment tips from an expert
Federal Practitioner
Halting active inflammation key in treating PIH
Federal Practitioner
Ruxolitinib for vitiligo: Experts share experiences from first year
Federal Practitioner
Lichen Sclerosus: The Silent Genital Health Concern Often Missed
Federal Practitioner