| Literature DB >> 31364444 |
Ruina Zhang1, Li Wang1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia; aminolevulinic acid; epithelial cells; human papillomavirus; photodynamic therapy; vulvar squamous cell cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31364444 PMCID: PMC6726813 DOI: 10.1177/0300060519862940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.671
Figure 1.Clinical appearance of vulvar lesions before treatment. (a, b) Erosive macerative patches and verrucous papules on the bilateral labium.
Figure 2.Histopathological appearance of vulvar lesions before treatment. (a, b) Histopathological analysis showed pronounced hyperkeratosis and parakeratosis, as well as thickening of the epidermis. Atypical cells and mitosis were observed throughout the epidermis with dermal inflammation. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining (a, magnification: 20×; b, magnification: 40×).
Figure 3.Clinical appearance of vulvar lesions after treatment. (a) After four sessions: partial response was observed and verruca patches were observed only in some areas. (b) After 10 sessions: complete response (CR) was achieved.
Figure 4.Epidermal thickness was reduced after treatment. Atypical BD cells were replaced by normal keratinocytes. Some lymphocytes and melanocytes were observed in the shallow layer of the dermis. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining (magnification: 20×).
PDT for the treatment of vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia.
| Source | No. of patients | PSZ | Light source | Energy | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Choi et al.[ | 15 | 5-ALA | 630 nm red light | 150 J/cm2 | CR rate was 80% (12/15) at the 3-month follow-up and 71.4% (10/14) at the 1-year follow-up. |
| Zawislak et al.[ | 25 | Bio-adhesive patch (5-ALA) | Non-laser light | -- | 52% of patients had a symptomatic response with pathology restored in 38% of lesions at 6 weeks. |
| Campbell et al.[ | 6 | mTHPC | 652 nm diode laser | -- | Two patients had recurrent disease, one patient had an area at a new site at 6 months. There was no recurrence in all patients at 2 years. |
| Abdel-Hady et al.[ | 32 | 5-ALA | 630 nm red light | 50 J/cm2 (10 patients) | Two of 10 women (20%) showed short-term response at 50 J/cm2. Eight of 22 women (36.36%) had normal histology at 12 weeks at 100 J/cm2. |
| Fehr et al.[ | 15 | 5-ALA | 635 nm laser light | 120 J/cm2 | 11 of 15 patients were free of VIN III as determined by biopsy at 8 weeks. Three recurrences were observed at 5, 6, and 7 months. |
| Hillemanns et al.[ | 25 | 5-ALA | 635 nm laser light | 100 J/cm2 | 52% of patients with 27 VIN lesions achieved a complete histological response. |
| Kurwa et al.[ | 6 | 5-ALA | 580–740 nm broad-band light | 150 J/cm2 | All patients had clinically evident persistent VIN III at 1-month. Five patients underwent surgical treatment and one is regularly reviewed. |
| Martin-Hirsch et al.[ | 18 | 5-ALA | 630 nm non-laser source | 50 J/cm2 (10 patients)100 J/cm2 (8 patients) | 89% of patients reported symptom relief. Nine of 10 developed local recurrence at 1 to 2 years. |
PSZ, photosensitizer; CR, complete response; 5-ALA, 5-aminolevulinic acid; mTHPC, meta-tetra (hydroxyphenyl) chlorin.