We built TrueDerm’s Daily Cream to do three things: hydrate deeply, protect gently, and rejuvenate naturally. It does all of that through three ingredients: squalane, acetyl hexapeptide‑8, and chamomile. Each chosen for how well it works and how well it’s tolerated. Each clinically tested and safe enough for the most sensitive skin.
Squalane: Skin’s Own Moisturizer
Squalane is found naturally in your skin. It also comes from olives. It helps skin stay soft and supple, however, your levels drop with age. That’s where squalane creams come in.
Across 7 studies (2 in humans, 5 preclinical) squalane reduced redness, helped heal wounds faster, and boosted protection against sun damage. It also helps collagen, which keeps your skin elastic and firm. No serious side effects were reported. Not once.
Acetyl Hexapeptide‑8: A Gentle Wrinkle Fighter
Acetyl hexapeptide‑8, also known as Argireline, is a lab-made peptide that mimics part of botulinum toxin but is milder and used as a cream instead of being injected. It smooths out fine lines by helping your skin preserve collagen. And it works. In a review of 10 clinical studies involving 312 people, every single trial showed a visible reduction in wrinkles. There were no serious side effects in any of them.
Chamomile: Calming, Healing, Safe
Chamomile isn’t just for tea. It has powerful anti-inflammatory and skin-soothing properties. A 2023 review looked at 18 clinical trials covering 1,099 cancer patients. These were people undergoing chemo and radiation: some of the harshest treatments on the body. Yet chamomile reduced anxiety, nausea, oral pain, and skin irritation.
It even helped improve appetite and quality of life. Across all studies, no serious side effects were seen. Even in this high-risk group.
Why We Made This Cream
We created the Daily Cream with our parents in mind. Both have combatted cancer and undergone chemotherapy, so safety was extremely important to us. So we made something we knew they could use every day. Something that would hydrate and heal. And something that would never harm. Purchase it here.
Sources
- Lum, K. et al. (2024). Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology. Acetyl Hexapeptide-8 as a Topical Alternative to Botulinum Toxin: A Review of the Literature. https://jddonline.com/articles/acetyl-hexapeptide-8-as-topical-alternative-botulinum-toxin-review-of-literature-S1545961625P8760X/
- Morgan, N.R. et al. (2024). Skin Integrated Science. Explicating the Multifunctional Roles of Tocotrienol and Squalene in Promoting Skin Health. doi.org/10.1002/ski2.448
- Maleki, M. et al. (2023). Integrative Cancer Therapies. Effect of Chamomile on the Complications of Cancer: A Systematic Review. doi.org/10.1177/15347354231164600