If you have used CellCept and experienced an increase or decrease in acne, please tell us about it here. Be sure to include as much information as possible, including when you started taking CellCept, the dosage, other side effects you experienced, and anything else that might be relevant. Acne is sometimes a side effect of prescription drug usage, but other times it has to do with hard-to-track-down lifestyle changes, bacteria in your gut, or nutrient deficiency. In our experience, the best way to treat acne is by eliminating sugar, flour, dairy, caffeine, and vegetable oils from your diet. Supplementing zinc, vitamin b complex, boron, melatonin, and SOD is likely to help as well.
Acneresearch.org offers resources for acne sufferers, including success stories, links to and summaries of dozens of clinical acne studies, and a lifestyle routine designed to help you treat acne naturally. If you want individual advice or are interested in contributing to the body of knowledge on acne, fill out our survey. You do not need to live with acne — it is a disease caused by a combination of a western lifestyle and western diet. By treating your acne, you’ll likely find yourself healthier, happier, and more attractive — physically and emotionally.
I have been on cellcept twice for 2 separate kidney transplants and every time I go on it my face breaks out like a 14 year old!! Done are zits, some are just bumps but it covers 90% of my face. I had great skin prior to taking cellcept except my skin was very oily. I am 39 years old and after everything I’ve been through I do not need severe acne on top of it all. Please help!!
I have been taking cellcept 1500mg for 1 year. Developed severe cystic acne at 2000mg seems to improve on less. I stopped using it. The follicles on my face seemed to be blocked, trapping hair and getting infected.