Antiperspirants work by physically blocking sweat ducts. It is a mechanical solution. Qbrexza does something different: it intercepts the nerve signal before the sweat gland even gets the message to fire. If you have been through the aluminum chloride route and are not getting enough relief, this is a meaningfully different approach and worth understanding.
It is also notably more expensive and comes with a different side effect profile than anything in the antiperspirant category. Here is what you need to know before talking to your doctor about it.
What Qbrexza Is
Qbrexza (glycopyrronium tosylate 2.4% cloth) is an FDA-approved prescription treatment for primary axillary hyperhidrosis in patients 9 years and older. It comes as pre-moistened, individually packaged cloth wipes.
The active ingredient is glycopyrronium, an anticholinergic compound. Anticholinergics block muscarinic receptors, which are the receptors that acetylcholine (a neurotransmitter) binds to when it is telling a gland or muscle to activate. Sweat glands are stimulated by acetylcholine. Block the receptor, and the gland does not receive the activation signal, regardless of how much the nervous system is sending it.
This is the same class of mechanism as oral anticholinergics like oxybutynin or glycopyrrolate, which are sometimes prescribed for generalized hyperhidrosis. The difference with Qbrexza is that it is delivered topically, limiting systemic absorption and reducing the severity of side effects compared to oral versions.
How It Differs from Aluminum-Based Antiperspirants
The distinction matters if you are trying to figure out which product to try.
Aluminum antiperspirants work downstream. They form a gel plug in the sweat duct after sweat has already been produced. They reduce how much sweat exits, but the gland is still being activated.
Qbrexza works upstream. It blocks the signal that would activate the gland in the first place. No signal, no production, no sweat to manage.
In practice, this means Qbrexza can work even in cases where the sweat production is so heavy that aluminum plugs cannot adequately contain it. It also means a different set of side effects, because anticholinergic compounds have systemic effects beyond just sweat glands.
What Qbrexza does not do that antiperspirants do: it does not help with sweat odor via an aluminum-aluminum reaction. It stops the sweat, but if odor is a concern, you may still want a separate deodorant.
How to Use Qbrexza
The application protocol is straightforward but the hand-washing step is critical.
What you do:
- Remove one cloth from its individual packet
- Unfold it completely
- Wipe it across the full underarm area (each side)
- Wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water immediately after
Why the hand washing matters: Glycopyrronium is an anticholinergic. If you touch your face, rub your eyes, or eat without washing your hands after application, you will absorb a meaningful amount of the drug through those mucous membranes. The result is rapid dry mouth and blurred vision. This is not dangerous, but it is uncomfortable and avoidable. Wash your hands. Every time.
Timing: Apply once daily. There is no strong evidence that timing (morning vs. night) dramatically changes efficacy, but most prescribing guidelines suggest morning application so you get the benefit during waking hours when sweating is most socially relevant.
What to avoid: Do not apply to broken, irritated, or recently shaved skin. Do not apply to areas other than the underarms unless directed by your doctor.
Side Effects
Qbrexza is a topically applied anticholinergic, and the side effect profile reflects that.
Dry mouth is the most commonly reported side effect. In clinical trials, about 24% of patients reported dry mouth. For most it was mild. For some it was significant enough to discontinue use.
Urinary hesitation or retention can occur. People with benign prostatic hyperplasia or other conditions that already cause urinary issues should discuss this risk with their doctor before starting Qbrexza.
Blurred vision (dilated pupils causing difficulty focusing on near objects) is possible, particularly if the drug reaches the eyes via unwashed hands or accidental contact.
Constipation is another possible anticholinergic effect, though less frequently reported with topical use.
Skin irritation at the application site is possible but less common than with aluminum-based products.
The side effects are consistently milder than oral anticholinergics because topical delivery means most of the drug stays in the area of application rather than circulating systemically. But they are not zero, especially early on before the body adjusts.
Cost and Insurance
Qbrexza is expensive without insurance. A box of 30 cloths (one month supply) runs approximately $300-400 at most pharmacies.
Insurance coverage varies. Qbrexza is an FDA-approved medication for a recognized condition, so it is often on formulary for plans that cover dermatology medications. Whether it requires prior authorization and what the out-of-pocket cost will be depends on your specific plan.
Timber Pharma (the manufacturer) offers a savings card program for commercially insured patients. This can bring the monthly cost down significantly. Check the official Qbrexza site for current program details.
For patients without insurance or on government insurance plans (Medicaid, Medicare) where savings cards typically do not apply, cost is a real barrier.
Clinical Effectiveness
Qbrexza was studied in two Phase 3 trials (ATMOS-1 and ATMOS-2) involving over 700 patients with primary axillary hyperhidrosis. The primary endpoint was a 4-point improvement on the Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Measure (HDSM-Ax) or a 2-point or greater improvement in the HDSS scale.
At week 4, approximately 37% of Qbrexza patients achieved at least a 4-point HDSM-Ax improvement, compared to about 28% on placebo. At week 12, the gap widened further. Gravimetric sweat production (measured by weighing how much sweat was produced in a set time) also showed significant reductions.
To put that in plain terms: about 37-50% of patients see meaningful improvement. That is solid but not a guarantee. Qbrexza works well for a substantial portion of people with axillary hyperhidrosis, and for others it does not provide sufficient relief.
Who Is the Best Candidate for Qbrexza?
Qbrexza makes the most sense for:
- People with primary axillary hyperhidrosis who have tried prescription antiperspirants (like Drysol) and want a non-invasive alternative before considering Botox
- People who have skin sensitivity or irritation with aluminum-based products
- People whose sweating is heavy enough that blocking the signal upstream seems more promising than downstream duct-plugging
- Those who can manage the cost with insurance or copay assistance
It is less ideal for:
- People with urinary issues, glaucoma, or other conditions affected by anticholinergics
- Areas other than armpits (the cloth format is specifically designed for axillary use)
- People looking for a very affordable option (cost remains a challenge)
Qbrexza vs. the Other Options
If you are comparing Qbrexza to its neighbors on the treatment ladder:
vs. Prescription antiperspirant (Drysol): Try Drysol first if you have not. It is less expensive and well-tolerated by most people. If Drysol fails or causes unacceptable irritation, Qbrexza is a logical next step with a different mechanism.
vs. Botox: Botox is more effective (85-90% reduction vs. roughly 37-50% responder rate for Qbrexza) and lasts 4-14 months per treatment. Qbrexza requires daily use but no injections. Some people prefer the non-procedural route. Cost comparison is complex since Botox can be several thousand dollars per session vs. Qbrexza at several hundred per month.
vs. Oral anticholinergics: Oral glycopyrrolate or oxybutynin is cheaper and covers the whole body but has more systemic side effects. If sweating is limited to armpits, topical Qbrexza is likely the better-tolerated option.
→ Hyperhidrosis Treatments: Every Option, Ranked by Effectiveness
→ Prescription Antiperspirant: What It Is and How to Get It
→ Botox for Sweating: How It Works, What It Costs, and Whether It Lasts
Qbrexza vs. Prescription Antiperspirant: Which to Try First?
These two treatments look similar from the outside (both are applied topically, both require a prescription) but they work through completely different mechanisms. That difference matters for figuring out which one belongs earlier in your treatment plan.
How they work differently
Prescription antiperspirants, like Drysol, use high-concentration aluminum chloride to form a gel plug inside the sweat duct. The gland fires normally. The sweat just can’t get out. It’s a downstream blockade.
Qbrexza blocks the nerve signal upstream, before the gland gets the message to activate at all. No signal, no production. Different mechanism, different side effect profile, different failure modes.
Which body areas each works better for
This is where the gap gets practical. Prescription antiperspirant requires a separate application to every area you want to treat. Armpits and hands? Two separate applications, likely two separate products, two different routines.
Qbrexza’s cloth format means one wipe covers both armpits in a single pass. Off-label, it can also be used on palmar or plantar surfaces (hands and feet), though the FDA approval is specifically for axillary use. If sweating affects multiple areas, you’re still dealing with separate applications, but the single-cloth format is more convenient than managing multiple stick or liquid applications.
Side effect comparison
Prescription antiperspirant’s main downside is local skin irritation: stinging, itching, or redness at the application site, particularly if applied to moist or sensitive skin. It doesn’t cause systemic effects.
Qbrexza’s side effects are anticholinergic and systemic: dry mouth (about 24% of users), urinary hesitation, blurred vision if hands aren’t washed after application. These are milder than oral anticholinergics, but they’re a different category of side effect than what you get from a topical aluminum product.
Cost comparison
Prescription antiperspirant with insurance is cheap. Without insurance, a bottle of Drysol or generic aluminum chloride runs $20-50. Qbrexza without insurance is $300-400 per month. With insurance and the manufacturer’s savings card, costs vary but remain higher than prescription antiperspirant in most scenarios.
The case for trying prescription antiperspirant first
Start with the cheaper, less systemically active option. Prescription antiperspirant works well for a lot of people with axillary hyperhidrosis. If it controls your sweating adequately without causing irritation, you’re done. No dry mouth, no hand-washing protocol, no $300/month.
Escalate to Qbrexza when: prescription antiperspirant doesn’t provide enough relief, you have skin sensitivity or chronic irritation from aluminum products, or the plugging mechanism just isn’t catching enough of your sweat volume. At that point, a different mechanism is worth trying before jumping to procedures like Botox.
The treatment ladder makes sense here. Prescription antiperspirant is the logical first step. Qbrexza is the logical second. Botox is third. That sequence usually gets you to the right level of treatment without over-treating early.
Sources
- Pivotal Phase 3 Trials of Glycopyrronium Cloth (Qbrexza) for Primary Axillary Hyperhidrosis, PMC, National Library of Medicine
- Hyperhidrosis: Diagnosis and Treatment, American Academy of Dermatology
- Hyperhidrosis, StatPearls, National Library of Medicine
- Hyperhidrosis, Cleveland Clinic