Skip to main content
Estimate

These guides are AI-generated educational summaries — not legal or medical advice.

C&P Exam Prep: Skin Diseases (Dermatitis / Psoriasis / Acne)

DC 7825 skin 38 CFR 4.118

DBQ Overview

Interview + Physical
Form Name
Skin_Diseases
Form Code
Skin_Diseases
Page Count
12
Examiner Type
Dermatologist or appropriate clinician
Estimated Duration
15-30 minutes
Exam Format
Interview + Physical

What to Expect During Your Exam

Exam Overview

To document the current severity, extent, treatment history, and functional impact of your skin condition so VA can assign a disability rating under 38 CFR - 4.118 using the General Rating Formula for the Skin.

What the examiner evaluates:

  • Diagnosis and ICD code for each skin condition
  • Total body surface area (TBSA) affected, expressed as a percentage
  • Exposed body surface area (EBSA) affected, expressed as a percentage
  • Whether the condition is active or in remission
  • Type, location, and characteristics of lesions (e.g., plaques, papules, pustules, nodules, cysts)
  • Presence of erythroderma or exfoliative dermatitis
  • Involvement of special areas: palmar, plantar, mucosal, intertriginous
  • Current medications including corticosteroids, biologics, retinoids, antihistamines, immunosuppressives
  • Duration and frequency of systemic and topical treatments
  • Frequency and severity of flare-ups
  • Whether regular clinic visits are required
  • Functional and occupational impact of the skin condition
  • Presence of secondary complications such as infections, scarring alopecia, hyperhidrosis, or vitiligo
  • History of phototherapy, photochemotherapy, or electron beam therapy
  • Resolved prior skin conditions and their history

The examiner will perform a physical inspection of affected skin areas. Wear clothing that allows easy access to all affected body areas. Bring a written summary of your flare-up history, current medications with dosages, and a list of all affected body locations. The examiner will also review your service treatment records and VA medical records.

Typical duration: 15-30 minutes

Total Body Surface Area (TBSA) Affected

The percentage of the entire body surface covered by the skin condition, including non-exposed areas.

What to expect:

The examiner will visually assess and estimate what percentage of your full body surface is affected by lesions, plaques, or other manifestations. The 'rule of nines' or palm method may be used. This is a critical rating driver under the General Rating Formula for the Skin.

Key thresholds:

  • Less than 5% of TBSA — May support 0% rating if controlled with topical therapy only
  • 5-20% of TBSA — Supports 10% rating range; key threshold for initial compensation
  • 20-40% of TBSA or systemic therapy required — Supports 30% rating range
  • 40%+ of TBSA or constant systemic therapy required — Supports 60% rating range

Tips:

  • Do not cover or treat your skin heavily the day before the exam so the examiner can see the full extent of involvement
  • If your condition fluctuates, inform the examiner of your worst-day extent, not just what they see today
  • Bring photographs from flare-up periods that show the true extent of involvement
  • Tell the examiner about ALL affected areas including scalp, genital area, intergluteal cleft, and intertriginous zones - these are easy to overlook during a rushed exam

Pain considerations: Skin conditions can cause significant pain, burning, and pruritus that worsens with heat, sweating, or activity. Communicate any pain associated with skin involvement to the examiner.

Exposed Body Surface Area (EBSA) Affected

The percentage of exposed body surface area (face, neck, hands, forearms, lower legs, and other areas typically visible) affected by the condition.

What to expect:

The examiner will separately document what percentage of exposed skin is affected. Under M21-1 adjudication guidance, both TBSA and EBSA must be documented or the DBQ is considered insufficient for rating purposes.

Key thresholds:

  • Any exposed area involvement — Supports higher rating and documents vocational/social impact
  • Face and neck involvement less than 40% — Noted separately on DBQ; affects disfigurement analysis
  • Face and neck involvement 40% or more — Documented separately and may support higher rating or separate disfigurement claim

Tips:

  • Specifically mention if your face, neck, or hands are affected - these areas carry significant functional and social impact
  • Describe how visible skin involvement affects your social interactions, employment, and daily activities
  • If your hands are affected, describe impact on manual tasks, hygiene, and grip

Pain considerations: Involvement of hands and feet can impair work performance and daily function. Describe any limitations in gripping, writing, or operating machinery due to skin involvement.

Lesion Characterization

Type, depth, and distribution of lesions including comedones, papules, pustules, nodules, cysts, plaques, and scales.

What to expect:

For acne specifically, the examiner will note whether lesions are superficial (comedones, papules, pustules) or deep (inflamed nodules and pus-filled cysts), and where they are located (face/neck vs. body areas vs. intertriginous areas). This directly drives the DC 7825 rating.

Key thresholds:

  • Superficial acne only — 0% rating under DC 7825
  • Deep acne affecting less than 40% of face and neck or body areas other than face and neck — 10% rating under DC 7825
  • Deep acne affecting 40%+ of face and neck — 30% rating under DC 7825
  • Deep acne affecting intertriginous areas (axilla, anogenital, etc.) — 30% rating under DC 7825
  • Chloracne with systemic involvement — Evaluated under applicable General Formula thresholds

Tips:

  • Point out every individual affected area and type of lesion during the physical exam - do not assume the examiner will find them all
  • Describe lesions at their worst, not only what is present on exam day
  • If you have scarring from prior deep lesions, ensure this is documented even if active lesions are fewer today

Pain considerations: Deep acne nodules and cysts are often painful and tender to touch. Describe pain level, tenderness, and any impact on wearing clothing, equipment, or protective gear.

Treatment Intensity Assessment

The level of treatment required to control the condition, including topical-only, systemic medications, biologics, phototherapy, and hospitalization-level care.

What to expect:

The examiner will document all current and past treatments, their duration, and whether the condition requires systemic (oral or injected) therapy as opposed to topical-only treatment. Systemic therapy requirement is an independent rating trigger under the General Rating Formula.

Key thresholds:

  • Topical therapy only required — Supports lower rating range (0-10%)
  • Systemic therapy (oral steroids, methotrexate, cyclosporine, etc.) required — Independently supports 30% or higher rating
  • Biologics required (e.g., adalimumab, ustekinumab, secukinumab) — Supports 60% or higher rating; indicates severe refractory disease
  • Phototherapy or photochemotherapy (PUVA) required — Documents severity beyond topical-only management

Tips:

  • Bring a complete medication list including drug name, dose, frequency, and how long you have been on each medication
  • If you tried and failed multiple therapies, list them in order - escalating treatment history documents severity
  • Mention any side effects from medications that also affect your daily function
  • If you were ever hospitalized or received intravenous treatment for your skin condition, state this clearly

Pain considerations: Systemic medications such as retinoids and immunosuppressives have significant side effects that affect quality of life. Describe how treatment-related side effects impact your daily activities.

Estimate

Rating Criteria Breakdown

60% 40% or more of the entire body or 40% or more of exposed are ...

40% or more of the entire body or 40% or more of exposed areas affected, OR; constant or near-constant systemic therapy such as corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive drugs required during the past 12 months.

Key Symptoms

  • 40%+ of total body surface area affected with active disease
  • 40%+ of exposed skin areas affected
  • Constant systemic therapy required (biologics, cyclosporine, methotrexate, oral steroids virtually continuously)
  • Erythroderma or exfoliative dermatitis
  • Condition refractory to multiple treatment lines
  • Severe functional and occupational impairment
  • Photochemotherapy (PUVA) or electron beam therapy required

CFR: General Rating Formula for the Skin 60%: 40%+ of entire body or exposed areas affected, or constant/near-constant systemic therapy including corticosteroids or immunosuppressives required during past 12 months. Biologics such as TNF inhibitors or IL-17/23 inhibitors indicate severity at this level.

30% 20-39% of the entire body or 20-39% of exposed areas affecte ...

20-39% of the entire body or 20-39% of exposed areas affected, OR; systemic therapy such as corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive drugs required for a total duration of 6 weeks or more but not constantly during the past 12 months. Under DC 7825 (Acne): deep acne affecting 40%+ of face and neck, OR affecting intertriginous areas (axilla, anogenital area, under the breasts, etc.)

Key Symptoms

  • Deep acne affecting 40% or more of face and neck
  • Deep acne affecting intertriginous areas (armpits, groin, under breasts, between buttocks)
  • 20-39% total body surface area with active disease
  • Systemic corticosteroids or immunosuppressives required 6+ weeks in past year
  • Regular dermatology clinic visits required
  • Phototherapy required to manage condition

CFR: DC 7825: deep acne affecting -40% of face/neck or intertriginous areas. DC 7806/7816 General Formula 30%: 20-39% TBSA or exposed area affected, or systemic therapy required 6+ weeks but not constantly in past 12 months.

10% At least 5% but less than 20% of the entire body (or exposed ...

At least 5% but less than 20% of the entire body (or exposed areas) affected, OR; at least 5% but less than 20% of exposed areas affected. Under DC 7825 (Acne): deep acne (deep inflamed nodules and pus-filled cysts) affecting less than 40% of the face and neck, or affecting body areas other than the face and neck.

Key Symptoms

  • Deep inflamed nodules or pus-filled cysts present
  • Affects less than 40% of face and neck
  • Affects body areas other than face and neck (trunk, back, shoulders)
  • 5-20% total or exposed body surface area affected
  • Intermittent flare-ups requiring topical or mild systemic treatment

CFR: DC 7825: deep acne affecting <40% face/neck or body areas other than face/neck. General Formula 10%: 5-19% of entire body or 5-19% of exposed areas affected, or intermittent systemic therapy such as corticosteroids required for a total duration of less than 6 weeks during the past 12 months.

0% No active skin disease, or condition is controlled with topi ...

No active skin disease, or condition is controlled with topical therapy alone with no significant area involvement. Under DC 7825 (Acne): superficial acne with comedones, papules, and pustules of any extent.

Key Symptoms

  • Superficial lesions only (comedones, papules, pustules)
  • Condition managed with over-the-counter or prescription topical products only
  • No requirement for systemic medications
  • No significant body surface area involvement triggering higher criteria

CFR: DC 7806 (Dermatitis/Eczema), DC 7816 (Psoriasis), DC 7825 (Acne): evaluated under General Rating Formula for the Skin; 0% if topical therapy only controls condition with minimal area involvement.

How to Describe Your Symptoms

Extent and Distribution of Skin Involvement

How to describe:

Be specific about every body area affected. Name the exact locations: scalp, face, neck, chest, back, abdomen, arms, forearms, hands, legs, feet, groin, armpits, under breasts, buttocks, genitals. Estimate what percentage of each area is covered during a flare-up.

Worst-day example:

“On my worst days, I have thick, scaly plaques covering my entire scalp, both elbows, both knees, my lower back, and the crack between my buttocks. My hands are cracked, bleeding, and covered in plaques. I would estimate at least 35-40% of my body surface is affected during a bad flare.”

What the examiner listens for:

Specific body locations and estimated percentage coverage, involvement of high-impact areas (hands, face, intertriginous zones), whether involvement is consistent or fluctuating.

Understatements to avoid:

Do not say 'it comes and goes' without quantifying how bad it gets. Do not omit involvement of private or intertriginous areas assuming they are not relevant - they are specifically rated.

Flare-Up Frequency, Duration, and Triggers

How to describe:

Describe how often you have flare-ups, how long they last, what triggers them (stress, heat, sweat, certain fabrics, chemicals, weather), and how long it takes to recover. Contrast your baseline with your worst flare.

Worst-day example:

“I have a moderate flare approximately every 6-8 weeks that lasts 2-3 weeks at a time. During a flare, I cannot wear long sleeves because the fabric rubs against my oozing plaques. I cannot sleep through the night because of itching. My worst flare lasted 6 weeks last spring and I missed 4 days of work.”

What the examiner listens for:

Frequency and duration of active phases versus remission, identifiable triggers, impact of flares on sleep, work, and activities of daily living.

Understatements to avoid:

Do not say 'I manage okay' if you are suffering during flares. The exam likely occurs on a relatively controlled day - you must communicate what your bad days look like.

Treatment Burden and Side Effects

How to describe:

List every treatment you use or have used: topical steroids (strength and frequency), calcineurin inhibitors, vitamin D analogs, oral medications (methotrexate, cyclosporine, retinoids, dapsone), biologic injections, phototherapy sessions. Describe the time burden of treatment, side effects, and what happens when you miss doses.

Worst-day example:

“I apply prescription-strength topical clobetasol twice daily to multiple body areas, which takes 30 minutes each morning. I also receive monthly biologic injections at the VA clinic. When I miss an injection, my psoriasis returns severely within 2 weeks. The biologic causes fatigue the day after injection and I have had repeated upper respiratory infections requiring antibiotics.”

What the examiner listens for:

Whether systemic or biologic therapy is required, duration of systemic therapy use in the past 12 months, whether condition is refractory to simpler treatments, treatment side effects that cause additional disability.

Understatements to avoid:

Do not minimize your treatment regimen. If you are on a biologic, that is clinically significant - say so clearly. Do not omit over-the-counter products if you use them constantly in addition to prescriptions.

Functional and Occupational Impact

How to describe:

Describe concretely how your skin condition limits your ability to work, perform military duties, engage in social activities, and maintain hygiene. Mention any restrictions from your employer or VA providers.

Worst-day example:

“My psoriasis on my hands prevents me from shaking hands with customers without embarrassment and physical pain. I cannot wear my military uniform without significant skin irritation from the fabric. I avoid swimming, the gym, and social gatherings because of the appearance of my skin. I have been passed over for promotion because my supervisor considered my frequent medical appointments disruptive.”

What the examiner listens for:

Specific work tasks limited by the condition, social withdrawal due to appearance or discomfort, need for special accommodations, frequency of medical appointments.

Understatements to avoid:

Do not say your condition does not affect your work if it does. Examiners document functional impact in a dedicated DBQ section - this feeds directly into the overall rating and any TDIU consideration.

Pain, Itching, Burning, and Sleep Disruption

How to describe:

Quantify itching and pain on a 0-10 scale. Describe how symptoms affect your sleep, concentration, and mood. Mention any secondary scratch injuries, infections, or open wounds from the condition.

Worst-day example:

“On a bad night, I rate my itching at 9 out of 10. I wake up 3-4 times scratching until I bleed. I have had secondary skin infections from scratching open my plaques on two occasions in the past year, requiring antibiotics. The sleep deprivation affects my concentration at work the next day.”

What the examiner listens for:

Severity of pruritus and pain, documented sleep disruption, secondary complications such as infection, impact on mental health.

Understatements to avoid:

Do not say the itching is 'just uncomfortable' if it disrupts your sleep. Sleep disruption is a serious functional consequence - name it directly.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Prep Checklist

0/23 complete

Before Your Exam

Day Of

During the Exam

After the Exam

Your Rights During a C&P Exam

  • You have the right to have a representative (VSO, attorney, or claims agent) present or available during your C&P examination.
  • You have the right to record your C&P examination in most states - check your state's one-party vs. two-party consent recording laws before the exam.
  • You have the right to request a copy of your completed DBQ examination report through MyHealtheVet, VBMS, or a Privacy Act request.
  • You have the right to submit additional evidence (lay statements, private medical opinions, photographs) after the exam and before a rating decision is issued.
  • You have the right to request a new or additional C&P examination if you believe the original exam was inadequate, incomplete, or based on an inaccurate history.
  • You have the right to appeal a rating decision through the Supplemental Claim lane, Higher-Level Review, or Board of Veterans Appeals (BVA) if you disagree with the outcome.
  • You have the right to submit a private independent medical opinion (IMO) or independent medical evaluation (IME) from a treating dermatologist that contradicts or supplements the C&P examiner's findings - VA must weigh this evidence.
  • Under the PACT Act, certain veterans with service in specific locations or with specific exposures may have presumptive service connection for skin conditions - ask your VSO whether presumptive provisions apply to your claim.
  • You have the right to be examined in person rather than by records review only, unless your condition is clearly established in the record - if asked to consent to a records-only review, you may decline and request an in-person examination.
  • The DBQ must document both TBSA and EBSA percentages to be sufficient for rating per M21-1 guidance - if the examiner declines to perform a full physical examination, document this in a contemporaneous written statement.

Get Personalized C&P Exam Preparation

Upload your medical records for AI-powered prep that maps YOUR symptoms to the exact DBQ fields your examiner will evaluate.

This C&P exam preparation guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, medical, or claims advice. Always consult with a qualified Veterans Service Organization (VSO) representative or VA-accredited attorney for guidance specific to your claim. Never exaggerate, minimize, or fabricate symptoms during a C&P examination.