Wednesday, July 1, 2026 See who Washington just made rich Go Pro · $20/mo →
Money Racket
Who Cashes In When Washington Moves
DEFENSELockheed Martin Lands $35B THAAD Contract to Quadruple Missile ProductiontodayENERGYDOE's $17.5B in Federal Loans Is Reshaping the Nuclear Energy Investment CasetodayTECHTrump's Quantum Orders Set Hard Deadlines for Post-Quantum Cryptography — and Create a Compliance MarkettodayTECHTrump Administration Lifts Export Controls on Anthropic's Claude AI ModelstodayWHITE HOUSEU.S.-Iran Ceasefire Deal Signed, but White House Asks Congress for $87.6B to Cover the War's TabtodayHEALTHCARE & FDADOJ's $6.5B Healthcare Fraud Takedown Puts Medicare Advantage Billing Under a MicroscopetodayCRYPTOBitcoin ETF Outflows Top $4 Billion in June as Citi Cuts Its Price ForecasttodayTRADE & TARIFFSTrump Suspends Fertilizer Tariffs, Cutting Input Costs for U.S. FarmerstodayMARKETSSupreme Court Gives Trump Power to Fire FTC Commissioners, Sparing the FedtodayHEALTHCARE & FDAFDA Launches Safety Reassessment of BHT and ADA, Two Additives in Millions of Food Productstoday
Acne

Benzoyl Peroxide

Potent antibacterial and keratolytic for moderate acne.

Also known as: Benzoyl peroxide, BPO; same name.

What it is
Benzoyl peroxide is an organic peroxide that releases free radicals when applied to skin. It's a non-antibiotic antimicrobial agent available in concentrations typically ranging from 2.5% to 10%.
What it does
It kills *Cutibacterium acnes* (formerly *Propionibacterium acnes*) by oxidative damage, reduces sebum production, and promotes mild exfoliation of the follicular epithelium. Unlike antibiotics, bacteria cannot develop resistance to benzoyl peroxide because of its oxidative mechanism. It also has mild anti-inflammatory effects.
The evidence
Strong clinical evidence supports efficacy for mild-to-moderate inflammatory acne; it is a first-line OTC and Rx agent. Moderate evidence supports its use in combination with topical antibiotics or retinoids to prevent antibiotic resistance and improve outcomes.
Best for
Oily, acne-prone skin with inflammatory lesions (papules, pustules); effective for both facial and body acne.
Pairs well with
Topical antibiotics (clindamycin, erythromycin), retinoids (adapalene, tretinoin), salicylic acid, and azelaic acid. Combination with antibiotics is particularly effective and reduces resistance risk.
Use cautiously with
Avoid concurrent use with vitamin C, retinol, and AHAs/BHAs in the same formula (oxidative degradation and irritation risk). Use caution with other drying or irritating actives; space application if combining.
Cautions
Causes dryness, irritation, and photosensitivity; use SPF 30+ daily. May bleach fabrics and hair. Rare allergic contact dermatitis. Generally safe in pregnancy but consult prescriber; avoid high concentrations. Start low (2.5%) and titrate to tolerance.
General information, not medical advice. Ingredient effects vary by formulation, concentration, and skin. Patch-test new actives and consult a qualified provider before starting prescription ingredients.

Know what's coming before your patients ask for it.

New actives, device launches, and the FDA calls that change what you can offer — distilled into a two-minute brief, twice a week. Inside MedSpa Pro.

Go Pro · $20/mo
Money Racket Pro

By the time it's news, the money's already moved.

The contract award, the executive order, the tariff cut — it mints winners before the financial press connects the dots. Pro gets you there first: what happened, who cashes in, and exactly what to watch — in a two-minute read.

Go Pro · $20/mo The policy-to-profit brief. Cancel anytime.
The twice-a-week profit brief Go Pro · $20/mo