Ingredients
Madecassoside vs. Asiaticoside: What’s Actually Calming Your Skin?
Every K-beauty brand has a CICA product. But “centella extract” on a label can mean almost anything — and the two molecules that matter most work in different ways.
Madecassoside
In experimental models, down-regulates NF-κB and NLRP3-related inflammatory pathways, reducing mediators like TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, and COX-2. Has some of the strongest calming and barrier-support evidence among Centella triterpenes. Closely related to madecassic acid, which may account for much of its direct activity.
Best for: Redness, sensitivity, barrier repair, post-procedure recovery
Asiaticoside
Modulates the TGF-β/Smad pathway — promotes collagen I and III synthesis and wound closure in normal skin, while helping normalize excessive collagen in keloid models. Has shown anti-melanogenic effects in preclinical models. Preclinical scar and keloid evidence.
Best for: Wound healing, collagen stimulation, scar prevention
⚠️ The Extract Problem
“Centella asiatica extract” has no mandated standardization. A “10% centella extract” standardized to just 0.2% madecassoside = roughly 0.02% actual madecassoside in the final formula. Products that list madecassoside or asiaticoside by name and disclose the percentage are far more transparent. Look for the molecule name, not the plant name.
How to Use
Twice daily as serum or essence. Typically formulated around skin-friendly mildly acidic pH (roughly 5–7). Pairs well with vitamin C (an RCT using 5% vitamin C + 0.1% madecassoside showed anti-aging benefits), niacinamide, ceramides, peptides. Separate from very low-pH AHAs/BHAs. Expect calming typically within 2–4 weeks, anti-aging over 6+ months. Topical centella at cosmetic levels appears low-risk during pregnancy, but data in pregnant populations are limited — check with your doctor. This caution is distinct from the more established concerns around oral centella supplements. CIR safety data: well-tolerated at 0.5% in human studies.
Final Take
“CICA” is a marketing category, not a quality guarantee. Madecassoside is the calming specialist with the strongest evidence. Asiaticoside leans more toward wound healing and collagen/scar support. Products that name the molecule and disclose the concentration are more trustworthy than those hiding behind a vague “centella extract.” If your CICA product works, it’s probably because the formulation contains enough of the right triterpenoid.