Custom Compounded Skin Medications: When Standard Treatments Are Not Working for Your Skin
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If you have been dealing with a persistent skin condition and feel like nothing is working quite right — the cream is too irritating, the concentration is not strong enough, or the commercial product you need is out of stock — you are not alone. Compounded dermatology medications exist precisely for situations like these, and they may offer a solution your regular pharmacy cannot.
What Does Compounded Mean for Skin Medications?
Compounding means a licensed pharmacy prepares a medication specifically for you, based on a prescription from your doctor or dermatologist. Rather than a mass-produced product that comes in a fixed strength and base, a compounded medication is made to match exactly what your provider has ordered. For skin conditions, this can mean adjusting the concentration of an active ingredient, combining two or more medications into a single product, changing the base from a cream to a gel or ointment, or eliminating an ingredient you are sensitive to, like a preservative or fragrance.
What Conditions Can Compounded Skin Medications Address?
Compounded dermatology medications are used across a wide range of skin conditions, under the direction of a prescribing provider. Common applications include acne, rosacea, eczema, psoriasis, hyperpigmentation, scar management, chronic wound care, topical pain, fungal infections, and warts. Dermatologists may also prescribe compounded numbing creams for procedures, or topical hormone therapies for specific conditions. The key is that the prescription comes from your doctor — compounding is a tailored solution your provider can access when commercial options are not the right fit.
Why Might My Doctor Recommend Compounding?
There are several situations where a compounding pharmacy becomes the practical solution. A commercial product you have been using may have been discontinued. Your insurance may not cover a brand-name dermatology medication, making a compounded alternative more affordable. Your dermatologist may want to combine two actives at specific concentrations that are not available in any single commercial product. Or you may have sensitivities to inactive ingredients in standard formulations — a compounding pharmacy can prepare the same active medication in a cleaner base.
Is Compounded Medication Safe?
Compounding pharmacies in Texas are regulated by the Texas State Board of Pharmacy and follow strict standards for quality and safety. Kearney Park Pharmacy adheres to USP 795 standards for non-sterile compounding and maintains quality processes that prioritize the safety and consistency of every preparation. Your provider will consider the appropriate formulation and concentration before prescribing.
How to Get a Compounded Skin Medication
Start by talking to your dermatologist, primary care provider, or specialist about whether a compounded medication is appropriate for your situation. If they agree, they can send a prescription directly to Kearney Park Pharmacy. We serve patients across Texas and offer shipping for most preparations. Call us at 972-329-1168 or ask your provider to fax to 972-329-1436.
Your Skin Deserves a Personalized Approach
One of the things that makes compounding valuable is the simple idea that not every person's skin is the same. What works at one strength for one patient may need to be adjusted for another. What works in a cream base for one person may cause irritation in someone else. Compounding gives your provider the flexibility to think about your skin — not just the average patient's skin. Kearney Park Pharmacy is here to help make that personalized approach a reality.







