C S Haak1, K Togsverd-Bo, D Thaysen-Petersen, H C Wulf, U Paasch, R R Anderson, M Haedersdal. 1. Department of Dermatology, D-92, Bispebjerg Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Bispebjerg Bakke 23, DK-2400, Copenhagen NV, Denmark; Wellman Center for Photomedicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, U.S.A.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is approved for selected nodular basal cell carcinomas (nBCC) but efficacy is reduced for large and thick tumours. Ablative fractional lasers (AFXL) facilitate uptake of methyl aminolaevulinate (MAL) and may thus improve PDT outcome. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate efficacy and safety of AFXL-mediated PDT (AFXL-PDT) compared with conventional PDT of high-risk nBCC. METHODS:Patients with histologically verified facial nBCC (n = 32) defined as high-risk tumours were included; diameter > 15 mm, tumours located in high-risk zones, or on severely sun-damaged skin. Tumours were debulked and patients randomized to either AFXL-PDT (n = 16) or PDT (n = 16). Fractional CO2 laser treatment was applied at 5% density and 1000 μm (80 mJ) ablation depth. MAL was applied under occlusion for 3 h and illuminated with a 633-nm light-emitting diode source, 37 J cm(-2) . Clinical assessments were performed at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months and biopsies were taken at 12 months. RESULTS:Clinical cure rates at 3 months were 100% (16 of 16 AFXL-PDT) and 88% (14 of 16 PDT, P = 0·484). Recurrences tended to occur later and in lower numbers after AFXL-PDT at 6, 9 and 12 months (6%, 19%, 19%) than PDT (25%, 38%, 44%) (P = 0·114). Histology at 12 months documented equal tumour clearance after AFXL-PDT (63%, 10 of 16) and PDT (56%, 9 of 16). Cosmetic outcomes were highly satisfactory after both treatments (P > 0·090). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term efficacy was similar after PDT and AFXL-PDT with a trend for a favourable short-term cure rate after AFXL-PDT. AFXL-PDT needs further refinement for nBCC and at present is not recommended over PDT.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is approved for selected nodular basal cell carcinomas (nBCC) but efficacy is reduced for large and thick tumours. Ablative fractional lasers (AFXL) facilitate uptake of methyl aminolaevulinate (MAL) and may thus improve PDT outcome. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate efficacy and safety of AFXL-mediated PDT (AFXL-PDT) compared with conventional PDT of high-risk nBCC. METHODS:Patients with histologically verified facial nBCC (n = 32) defined as high-risk tumours were included; diameter > 15 mm, tumours located in high-risk zones, or on severely sun-damaged skin. Tumours were debulked and patients randomized to either AFXL-PDT (n = 16) or PDT (n = 16). Fractional CO2 laser treatment was applied at 5% density and 1000 μm (80 mJ) ablation depth. MAL was applied under occlusion for 3 h and illuminated with a 633-nm light-emitting diode source, 37 J cm(-2) . Clinical assessments were performed at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months and biopsies were taken at 12 months. RESULTS: Clinical cure rates at 3 months were 100% (16 of 16 AFXL-PDT) and 88% (14 of 16 PDT, P = 0·484). Recurrences tended to occur later and in lower numbers after AFXL-PDT at 6, 9 and 12 months (6%, 19%, 19%) than PDT (25%, 38%, 44%) (P = 0·114). Histology at 12 months documented equal tumour clearance after AFXL-PDT (63%, 10 of 16) and PDT (56%, 9 of 16). Cosmetic outcomes were highly satisfactory after both treatments (P > 0·090). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term efficacy was similar after PDT and AFXL-PDT with a trend for a favourable short-term cure rate after AFXL-PDT. AFXL-PDT needs further refinement for nBCC and at present is not recommended over PDT.
Authors: John Paoli; Johan Dahlén Gyllencreutz; Julia Fougelberg; Eva Johansson Backman; Maja Modin; Sam Polesie; Oscar Zaar Journal: Dermatol Pract Concept Date: 2019-04-30
Authors: Arne A Meesters; Marilin J Nieboer; Mitra Almasian; Giota Georgiou; Menno A de Rie; Rudolf M Verdaasdonk; Albert Wolkerstorfer Journal: Lasers Surg Med Date: 2019-03-25 Impact factor: 4.025