| Introduction
 Niacinamide is a biologically active form of niacin (vitamin  B3) found widely in many root vegetables and yeasts. It is also an important  precursor to the co-factors NADH (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) and NADPH  (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate). Along with their reduced forms  NADH and NADPH, these enzymes participate in numerous enzymatic reactions and  also act as antioxidants. One of the advantages of niacinamide is its stability  being unaffected by light, moisture, acids, alkalis, or oxidizers.
 Niacinamide has several proposed medicinal applications in  the skin including anti-inflammation, prevention of photoimmunosuppression and  increased intercellular lipid synthesis.    Mode of Action
 Niacinamide’s role as a co-enzyme  precursor may explain the multiple roles it has in skin, but this is not  clearly defined. Topical niacinamide is described to have several benefits on  aging skin including but not limited to improved barrier function, improved  appearance of photoaged facial skin (including texture, hyperpigmentation,  redness, fine lines and wrinkles) and reduced sebum production. Additionally,  niacinamide is believed to influence cutaneous pigmentation by down-regulating  transfer of melanosomes from the melanocytes to the keratinocytes without  inhibiting tyrosinase activity or cell proliferation, and it may also interfere  with the cell-signaling pathway between keratinocytes and melanocytes to  decrease melanogenesis.
 
 Studies suggest that niacinamide has no effect on tyrosinase  activity, melanin synthesis or melanocyte number in a monolayer culture system.  Alternatively, the authors found that niacinamide down-regulated the number of  melanosomes transferred from melanocytes to keratinocytes by 35 to 68% in a  co-culture model system with 1 mmol L-1 niacinamide for 12 days. Niacinamide  with retinyl palmitate has been shown to improve hyperpigmentation and increase  skin lightening after 4 weeks of treatment compared with vehicle alone. In a  separate clinical study, topical niacinamide was also shown to decrease  collagen oxidation products and improve aging-induced yellowing or sallowness.  .
 The actual process by which niacinamide down-regulates  melanosome transfer remains to be properly established.
   Safety
 The safety and efficacy of niacinamide for PIH in darker  skinned individuals has not been studied; however, topical 2 to 5% niacinamide  has shown some efficacy when used alone or in combination with N-acetyl  glucosamine for the treatment of melasma and UV-induced hyperpigmentation in  fair-skinned patients and Asians.
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