Warts and Plantar Warts

Medications

Most warts do not need to be treated. They generally go away on their own within months or years.2 This may be because, with time, your immune system is able to destroy the human papillomavirus that causes warts.

If you decide to treat your warts, both non-prescription and prescription medications are available.

For more information, see:

Click here to view a Decision Point.Should I treat warts or plantar warts?

Medication Choices

Non-prescription medications

Non-prescription medications include:

  • Salicylic acid, which softens the skin layers that form a wart so that they can be rubbed off. This topical medication is currently considered the most desirable wart treatment, based on its effectiveness and safety, but it may take weeks to months to cure a wart. Other therapies do not appear to be more effective and tend to cause more pain or other side effects.3 Salicylic acid formulas include Compound W Wart Remover, Occlusal, and DuoFilm.
  • Cantharidin (Cantharone), which causes the skin under the wart to blister, lifting the wart off of the skin.

Prescription medications

Prescription medications less commonly used to treat warts include:

  • Retinoid cream (Retin-A, Renova, Retisol), which is a prescription medication that you apply to the wart at home. It disrupts the wart's skin cell growth.
  • Cantharidin (Cantharone, Cantharone Plus), which causes the skin under the wart to blister, lifting the wart off the skin. This medication is injected into the wart at your health professional's office.
  • Bichloracetic acid (BCA), which kills warts by destroying the proteins in the cells. It is useful for warts on the palms and on the soles of the feet. BCA also can destroy normal cells, which is why careful application is needed. A health professional applies BCA once a week.

Other medications

Immunotherapy triggers your immune system to destroy the virus causing the wart. Because some of the substances used for immunotherapy are expensive, dangerous, or require specialized handling, such treatment is usually considered only after other methods have failed. Immunotherapy options include contact sensitizers (such as diphencyprone or DCP), imiquimod (Aldara), and interferon. Interferon is an experimental treatment and is used only for severe and treatment-resistant warts. Discuss the benefits and side effects of interferon treatment with your health professional.

Bleomycin injection destroys the skin containing the wart. Because bleomycin is painful during and after the injection, it is used infrequently.

See a table comparing these other treatment options.

What To Think About

Salicylic acid treatments are often effective. They are not very painful, not very expensive, and usually do not cause scarring. Salicylic acid is a good treatment for children because it is not very painful. For treatment to be successful, salicylic acid must be applied on a regular basis, usually for a number of months.

Wart treatment is not always successful. Even after a wart shrinks or disappears, warts may return or spread to other parts of the body. This is because most treatments only destroy the wart, but do not kill the virus that causes the wart.

Your treatment options will depend on the type, number, and location of the wart(s).

Other medications used for warts include 5-fluorouracil, which is more often used on genital warts, and cimetidine. Cimetidine can be taken by mouth (orally) or as an injection.

As with any medication, talk to your health professional before using a wart medication if you are or may be pregnant. Some wart medications may cause birth defects.

It is necessary to distinguish a plantar wart from a callus before choosing a treatment. Wart treatment applied to a callus may be painful or create scar tissue.

Plantar warts are often difficult to treat because they lie beneath the skin. A health professional may need to pare the skin covering a wart to help the medication penetrate the wart.


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Author: Douglas Dana
Sabra L. Katz-Wise
Ralph Poore
Last Updated: January 10, 2007
Medical Review: Adam Husney, MD - Family Medicine
Randall D. Burr, MD - Dermatology
Andrew Swan, MD, CCFP, FCFP - Family Medicine

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