Treatment of Molluscum Contagiosum
Primary Treatment Recommendation
Physical removal methods—including cryotherapy with liquid nitrogen, curettage, or excision—are the first-line treatment for molluscum contagiosum, particularly for symptomatic lesions, multiple lesions, or periocular involvement. 1
Treatment Algorithm
When to Treat Actively vs. Observe
Treat actively if any of the following are present: 1, 2
- Symptomatic lesions (pain, itching, redness)
- Multiple lesions
- Lesions near the eyes causing conjunctivitis
- Concerns about transmission to others
- Patient/parent preference for active intervention
Watchful waiting is reasonable only for: 2
First-Line Physical Treatment Options
Cryotherapy with liquid nitrogen 1, 2
- Achieves complete response in approximately 93% of cases 2
- Apply until visible freezing extends slightly beyond the lesion margin into normal skin 1
- Common pitfall: Risk of postinflammatory hyperpigmentation (most common adverse effect, may persist 6-12 months) or scarring 1, 2
- Avoid treating sensitive areas including eyelids, lips, nose, and ears due to higher complication risk 1
- No anesthesia is typically needed 1
- Recommended by the American Academy of Ophthalmology as first-line for periocular lesions 1
- Particularly important for lesions causing conjunctivitis 1
First-Line Chemical Treatment Options
10% potassium hydroxide solution 1, 2
- Similar efficacy to cryotherapy (86.6% complete response vs. 93.3% for cryotherapy) 1
- Better cosmetic results than cryotherapy due to lower risk of hyperpigmentation 1
- Preferred for facial lesions or patients with darker skin tones 1
Cantharidin 1
Critical Treatment Principles
Treat ALL lesions, including nascent ones 1
- Carefully examine for early lesions during initial treatment 1
- Common pitfall: Missing nascent lesions is a frequent cause of recurrence 1
- Reducing viral load allows the host immune response to eliminate residual virus 1
Special Populations
Periocular Lesions with Conjunctivitis
- Physical removal is mandatory to resolve conjunctivitis 1
- Conjunctivitis may take several weeks to resolve after lesion removal 1
- Follow-up monitoring required until conjunctivitis resolves 1
Immunocompromised Patients
- Multiple large lesions with minimal inflammation should prompt screening for immunodeficiency 1
- Consider referral to dermatology for extensive or recalcitrant disease 1
- Atypical presentations may occur (giant, disseminated, necrotic forms) 1
Children Under 2 Years
- Salicylic acid is contraindicated due to risk of systemic toxicity 2
Treatments That DO NOT WORK
Imiquimod should NOT be used 1, 2, 4
- Showed no benefit compared to placebo in randomized controlled trials in both adults and children 1, 4
- Two pediatric studies (702 subjects) demonstrated 24% clearance with imiquimod vs. 26-28% with vehicle 4
- Explicitly not recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics 1
- FDA labeling specifically states imiquimod "failed to demonstrate efficacy" for molluscum contagiosum 4
H2 blockers (ranitidine, cimetidine) 2