Voriconazole is an important antifungal, but it can make your skin much more sensitive to sunlight. Some people develop mild rashes, while others can get severe sunburn even after only a few minutes outdoors.

🌞 Protect your skin every day

  • High-factor sunscreen (SPF 50+) on all exposed skin, even in winter or cloudy weather.

  • Lip balm with SPF for lips, which are often affected.

  • Protective clothing: hats, long sleeves, UV-blocking fabrics if possible.

  • Avoid peak sun (11am–3pm) and try to stay in shade when outdoors.

👀 Watch your skin closely

  • Report any new rashes, blisters, lumps, or patches to your specialist team.

  • Regular skin checks may be offered if you are on long-term voriconazole.

💊 Medication review

  • If severe reactions develop, your doctors may:

    • Adjust the dose

    • Switch you to another antifungal (e.g. posaconazole, isavuconazole)

    • Add specialist dermatology follow-up

🚨 When to act fast

Seek medical advice urgently if you develop:

  • Blistering burns after short sun exposure

  • Painful or rapidly changing skin lesions

  • Any signs of infection in damaged skin


💙 Key message for patients: Sun sensitivity on voriconazole is common enough that everyone should take precautions. Don’t wait until your skin is badly affected — protect daily, and tell your team about any changes.

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