Home » Acne News » How Social Media Recruitment Is Transforming Diversity in Dermatology Clinical Trials

Recruiting and retaining participants has long been one of the toughest challenges in clinical research. In dermatology, the problem is even more pronounced. Conditions like acne, eczema, and psoriasis affect millions worldwide—yet clinical trial enrolment often lags behind targets.
A recent study embedded within the Spironolactone for Adult Female Acne (SAFA) trial offers new insights into how social media advertising can help bridge this gap. By tapping into platforms like Facebook and Instagram, researchers are discovering powerful ways to expand reach, improve diversity, and enhance access to dermatology research.
Why Recruitment Is So Difficult in Dermatology Trials
Even for common skin conditions, recruiting participants is rarely straightforward. Dermatology trials face several persistent barriers:
Without diverse participation, study results may not fully reflect how treatments perform across real-world populations. In other words, if the research doesn’t include everyone, the evidence doesn’t serve everyone.
The SAFA Study: A Case Study in Modern Recruitment
The SAFA trial evaluated the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of spironolactone versus placebo for treating acne in adult women. Alongside the main study, researchers ran a nested observational study comparing how different recruitment strategies performed.
Recruitment channels included:
This design allowed the research team to directly compare reach, enrolment, and participant diversity between traditional and digital approaches.
What the Study Found
The findings reveal both the strengths and limitations of social media recruitment:
While social media had a lower conversion rate (0.43%), its sheer volume of reach and speed of engagement made it a standout performer.
Even more importantly, social media helped broaden representation:
This demonstrates how digital outreach can connect with patients who might otherwise remain unseen by traditional recruitment pathways.
Why Social Media Works
Social media offers several clear advantages for clinical trial recruitment:
The Diversity Dividend
One of the most exciting aspects of the SAFA findings is the impact on participant diversity.
Historically, dermatology trials have struggled to include patients from diverse ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds, even though these groups often experience disproportionate disease burdens. Social media appears to be changing that.
By enabling broader reach and more inclusive messaging, digital recruitment can help trials reflect the real-world diversity of the patients they aim to serve.
Diverse recruitment isn’t just a social good—it’s a scientific necessity:
Balancing Strengths and Limitations
While social media clearly boosts numbers and diversity, it’s not without challenges.
Still, the trade-off may be worthwhile. Broader reach and improved diversity can offset the inefficiencies of lower conversion, particularly when inclusivity is a research priority.
Implications for the Future of Dermatology Research
The SAFA study offers a powerful takeaway: social media recruitment should be a core part of dermatology trial design, not just an optional add-on.
Rather than replacing traditional methods, digital campaigns should complement them—combining the trust of GP referrals with the accessibility of social media.
Future directions could include:
Conclusion
Recruitment challenges have long slowed progress in dermatology research. But as the SAFA trial shows, social media advertising offers a scalable, inclusive, and highly effective way to reach new participants.
By engaging patients with longer disease histories, under-represented backgrounds, and limited access to academic centres, social media is helping reshape what dermatology research looks like—and who it includes.
For dermatologists, researchers, and sponsors alike, the message is clear:
👉 Social media is not a novelty. It’s a necessity for building the next generation of inclusive, patient-centred clinical trials.
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