| Literature DB >> 35888655 |
Yeon Seok Lee1, Yu Jin Lee1, Jung Min Lee1, Tae Young Han1, June Hyunkyung Lee1, Jae Eun Choi1.
Abstract
Melasma is a common pigmentary disorder with a complex pathogenesis, of which the treatment is challenging. Conventional treatment often leads to inconsistent results with unexpected pigmentary side effects and high recurrence rates. Recently, the low-fluence Q-switched Nd:YAG laser (LFQSNY) has been widely used for treating melasma, especially in Asia. We reviewed literatures on the LFQSNY treatment of melasma published between 2009 and May 2022 to evaluate the efficacy and adverse events, including its combination therapy. A systematic PubMed search was conducted and a total of 42 articles were included in this study. It was hard to summarize the heterogenous studies, but LFQSNY appeared to be a generally effective and safe treatment for melasma considering the results of previous conventional therapies. However, mottled hypopigmentation has been occasionally reported to develop and persist as an adverse event of LFQSNY, which may be associated with the high accumulated laser energy. When used aggressively, even LFQSNY can induce hyperpigmentation via unwanted inflammation, especially in darker skin. Although few studies have reported considerable recurrence rates three months after treatment, unfortunately, there is a lack of the long-term follow-up results of LFQSNY in melasma. To enhance the effectiveness and reduce the adverse events, LFQSNY has been used in combination with other treatment modalities in melasma, including topical bleaching agents, oral tranexamic acid, chemical peeling, or diverse energy-based devices, which generally reduced side effects with or without significant superior efficacy compared to LFQSNY alone.Entities:
Keywords: Q-switched Nd:YAG laser; laser; laser toning; melasma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35888655 PMCID: PMC9323185 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58070936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
Figure 1Literature search and article selection.
Q-switched Nd:YAG laser with or without other treatment modality.
| Year | Refs. | Study Design | Patients: | Treatment A | Treatment B | Treatment C | Treat. Duration § | Follow-Up Period † | Melasma Type ǂ | Efficacy/Outcomes * | Tolerability/ Adverse Events ** | Recurrence Rates |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Micek I. et al. [ | Prospective | 40, Caucasian (Fitzpatrick II–III) | 1064 nm QSNY (5 ns, 6–8 mm, 1.7–3.5 J/cm2, | N/A | N/A | 1–2 w, 9 s | B, +2 w (40/40) | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI (5.27 ± 2.47 to 3.54 ± 2.18), MI (183.17 ± 29.39 to 152.76 ± 24.91), and EI scores (351.96 ± 52.54 to 309.14 ± 46.01) 2 weeks after treatment Improvement of mMASI and MI scores maintained after 1 year | Temporary darkening of the hyperpigmentation (5/40), permanent discoloration (1/40), dryness (4/40) | 8/21 (38%) 1 year after last session, during summertime |
| 2022 | Hong J.K. et al. [ | Prospective, split-face | 20, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 2.0–3.0 J/cm2, 10 Hz, | 1064 nm PSNY (10 mm, 1.5–2.5 J/cm2, 10 Hz, 3–5 passes) | N/A | 2 w, 5 s | B, +4 w | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) 4 weeks after treatment Clinical improvement (both A and B) 4 weeks after treatment No significant differences in mMASI and MI scores 4 weeks after treatment between A and B Patient satisfaction: in A, 15/19 (78.9%) had grade 4 (marked improvement) or 5 (very marked), in B 13/19 (67.4%) showed same score | No serious adverse events | N/A |
| 2021 | Ibrahim, S.M.A. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 50 Egyptian | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 1–1.5 J/cm2, 10 Hz, 2–6 passes) | Topical silymarin cream 1.4% (14 mg/mL): stearic acid 15 g, glycerin 5 g, KOH 0.72 g, H2O 79 g | N/A |
2 w, 6 s BID, 3 M | B, +3 M | A: D (3), E (4), M (18) |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) 12 weeks after treatment (A: 7.3 to 2.1, B: 9 to 2.3) No significant differences in mean difference and percentage of change of mMASI score 12 weeks after treatment between A and B (68.8%, 54.9%) | Worsening of melasma (1 in group B, but the patient did not use sun block properly) | N/A |
| 2021 | Esmat, S. et al. [ | Prospective, split-face randomized | 30, Egyptian | 1064 nm QSNY (3 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz, 2 passes) | Group A: low power fractional CO2 alone (10 W, 800 micrometer interdot space, dwell time of 200 microseconds, no stacking) | N/A | QSNY: 2 w, 9 s | B, +1 w, +2 M, +3 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score 8 weeks after treatment with all regimens (QSNY 2.38 ± 1.49 to 1.49 ± 1.30, fractional CO2 2.04 ± 1.14 to 1.50 ± 0.86, combined 2.16 ± 1.43 to 1.04 ± 1.19), but did not maintain the reduction until 12 weeks after treatment Significant reduction in the MI scores 8 weeks after treatment with all regimens (QSNY 619.07 ± 45.60 to 613.83 ± 37.10, fractional CO2 615.13 ± 47.37 to 636.29 ± 40.31, combined 621.80 ± 49.97 to 615.38 ± 30.78) Significantly greater reduction in mMASI and MI scores on the side receiving QSNY than low-power fractional CO2 after 1 week of treatment (64.03%, 8.27% vs. 36.02%, 2.64%), but the difference between becoming insignificant 8 weeks after treatment No significant differences in changes of mMASI and MI scores 8 weeks after treatment between QSNY and combined modality | Vitiligo-like depigmentation on the QSNY side (familial history of vitiligo) (1) | N/A |
| 2021 | Debasmita, B. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 60, Indian | 1064 nm QSNY (0.8 J/cm2, 4 Hz, 2.5 and 4 mm spot, 2 passes each) and topical 3% tranexamic acid | Microneedling (1.5 mm depth) and topical 3% tranexamic acid | N/A | 4 w, 5 s | B, +2 M | N/A |
Significant reduction in mMASI score after last treatment (both A and B) (A: 5.12 ± 2.66 to 2.33 ± 1.33, B: 4.60 ± 2.38 to 1.88 ± 1.08) No significant differences in changes of mMASI and MI scores after last treatment between A and B No significant differences in patient satisfaction after last treatment between A and B | Transient burning sensation: A (6/30, 20%), B (4/30, 13.3%) | N/A |
| 2021 | Agamia N. et al. [ | Prospective | 60, Egyptian | Oral TA (250 mg/day) | 1064 nm QSNY (4 mm, 2 J/cm2, 3 Hz) and oral TA (250 mg/day) | N/A | QSNY: 2 w, 6 s | B, +0, +3 M | A: E (4), D (2), M (24) |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) after last treatment and at the end of follow-up (3 months) Group B showed a statistically higher change of mMASI score compared to group A after last treatment (in A, 23 ± 11.9, 16.7 ± 0, 20.9 ± 8.7 with epidermal, dermal, and mixed type, respectively, in B, 37.2 ± 12, 4.2 ± 0, and 41.1 ± 21.7, respectively) | Minimal, transient adverse events (unspecified) | N/A |
| 2020 | Dev, T. et al. [ | Prospective, split-face, randomized | 28, Indian (Fitzpatrick IV, V) | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 1.5 J/cm2, 10 Hz, 10 | TC cream (hydroquinon 4%, tretinoin 0.05%, and fluocinolone acetonide z0.01%) | N/A | A: 1 w, 12 s | B, +0, +1 M, +2 M, +3 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) 12 weeks after treatment (A: 3.3 ± 1.9 to 2.7 ± 1.5, B: 3.3 ± 2.0 to 2.3 ± 1.6) Significant decrease in MI score (both A and B) 12 weeks after treatment (A: 50.6 ± 5.9 to 48.3 ± 5.9, B: 49.9 ± 6.1 to 47.8 ± 5.4) Significant improvement in photographic assessment 12 weeks after treatment (both A and B) (A: 17.3%, B: 20.9%) Significant decrease in patient-reported severity score 12 weeks after treatment (both A and B) (A: 5 to 3.5 ± 0.9, B: 5 to 3.3 ± 1.1) No inter-modality difference in any of the above outcome measures | A: None, B: Erythema, and telangiectasia | All cases recurred in 21 patients of both groups who were followed up for 3 months |
| 2019 | Kwon, H.H. et al. [ | Retrospective | 114, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–V) | 1064 nm QSNY (7–8 mm, 3.0 J/cm2 with PTP mode, 10 Hz) | 1064 nm QSNY (7–8 mm, 3.0 J/cm2 with PTP mode, 10 Hz) | N/A | 1 w, 10 s | B, +3 M | N/A |
Significantly greater reduction in mMASI score after last treatment in group A compared to group B (A: 2.9, B: 1.8) Better PhGA scoring after last treatment in group A compared to group B; A (excellent 29%, good 39%), B (excellent 14%, good 40%) Significantly higher patients’ self-assessment scoring after last treatment in group A than group B (A: 3.3, B: 2.2) |
Significantly higher rates of MH in group B (8/58) compared to group A (5/56) Significantly higher rates of RH in group B (9/58) compared to group A (5/56) Significantly higher pain sensation in group A compared to group B (mean VAS, 3.8 vs. 2.1) | N/A |
| 2019 | Jung J.W. et al. [ | Prospective, split-face | 15, Korean | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 1.19 J/cm2 with PTP mode, median shot 2350.1) | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 1.19 J/cm2 with PTP mode, median shot 2350.1) | N/A | 2 w, 5 s | B, +2 w | N/A |
Significant reduction in Mexameter® (MI + EI) and PSI scores after last treatment (both A and B) Significantly greater reduction in Mexameter® score after last treatment in group A compared to group B (A: 148.98 ± 57.45 to 65.55 ± 26.24, B: 143.24 ± 54.85 to 87.31 ± 42.13) Significantly greater reduction in PSI score after last treatment in group A compared to group B (A: 10.20 ± 3.06 to 5.50 ± 2.05, B: 11.13 ± 4.88 to 7.63 ± 3.16) Better patient satisfaction scoring after last treatment in group A compared to group B (A: 3.53 ± 0.81, B: 3.13 ± 0.96) |
None of severe adverse events Significantly higher pain sensation in group A compared to group B (mean VAS, 3.4 vs. 1.73) | N/A |
| 2018 | Choi, J.E. et al. [ | Retrospective | 40, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 1.2–2.0 J/cm2, 10 Hz, | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 10 s | B, +0, +3.6 ± 1.1 w | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (3.19 ± 2.64 to 1.46 ± 1.06, 54.2%) after last treatment Improved in PhGA after last treatment; excellent (2.5%), good (35%), fair (37.5%), poor (15%) and no improvement (10%) The reduction in mMASI score after last treatment significantly increased relative to the number of treatment sessions | MH and RH (2/40, 5%) | N/A |
| 2018 | Kong, S.H. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, split-face | 17, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–V) | 1064 nm QSNY (7 mm, 1.2–2.0 J/cm2,10 Hz, | PDL + QSNY (firstly QSNY on the entire face and subsequent PDL 595 nm, 20 ms, 7 mm, 7–8 J/cm2, 2–3 passes) on the half of the face | N/A | A: 1 w, 9 s | B, +1 w, +2 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in MASI score (both A and B) 8 weeks after treatment (A: 6.53 ± 2.65 to 5.07 ± 2.58, B: 6.23 ± 2.81 to 5.33 ± 2.84) No significant difference in MASI score between A and B 8 weeks after treatment Significant difference in MASI score between patients (n = 7) who showed visibly widened capillaries in dermoscopy between A and B 8 weeks after last treatment (A: 5.99 ± 2.86 to 5.09 ± 2.88, B: 6.60 ± 2.66 to 4.29 ± 2.24) No significant difference in MASI score in the patients (n = 10) who did not show visibly widened capillaries between A and B 8 weeks after last treatment | PIH, RH (2/17) only in group B (Fitzpatrick IV–V, who had visibly widened vessels in dermoscopy) | N/A |
| 2018 | Saleh, F. et al. [ | Prospective, split-face | 19, Egyptian (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (6–7 mm, 1.2–3.5 J/cm2, 10 Hz, | QSNY + modified Jessner’s solution peel (17% lactic acid, 17% salicylic acid, 8% citric acid dissolved in 95% ethanol) | N/A |
2 w, 6 s QSNY 3 s + peel 3 s (performed in alternating sequence, 2 w) | B, +1 M | M(19) |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) 1 month after last treatment (A: 46.3%, B: 47.5%) No significant difference in mMASI score between A and B 1 month after last treatment Significant decrease in amount of melanin pigment (presented in MPSA) (both A and B) after last treatment, with no significant difference between A and B Significant decrease in the number of MART-1-positive melanocytes after last treatment (both A and B), with no significant difference between A and B | MH (4/19, in the side A) | N/A |
| 2017 | Kaminaka | Randomized, split-face | 13, Japanese (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 2.0–2.5 J/cm2, 5 Hz, 3 passes) | No treatment | N/A | 1 w, 10 s | B, +0, +1 M, +3 M, +6 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mean MI score at 1 month after last treatment (214.5 ± 8.6 to 168.3 ± 8.2) Improvement of mean MI score maintained significantly until 6 months after last treatment Significant decrease in EI score 6 months after last treatment (291.1 ± 15.2 to 244 ± 17.0) Poor cases of melasma had higher EI score compared to the Good or Better cases at baseline (340.5 ± 14.7 vs. 264.66 ± 20.1) | PIH (1/20, 5.0%): spontaneously resolved after 3 months | 1/12 (8.3%) in 3 months follow-up and 2/12 (16.7%) in 6 months follow-up |
| 2017 | Alavi, S. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 41, Iranian | 1064 nm QSNY (400–500 mJ, 8 mm, 0.769–0.995 J/cm2) | QSNY + FEYL (400 mJ, 7 mm, 1.040 J/cm2, 10 Hz) | N/A | 2 w, 4 s | B, +0 | N/A |
Significant increase in percent changes in Visioface® score (both A and B) after last treatment (A: 29.25 ± 13.20%, B: 56.95 ± 40.29%) Significantly higher increase in percent change in Visioface® score in group B after last treatment compared to group A Significantly higher decrease in percent change of MI score in group B after last treatment compared to group A (22.01 ± 10.67 vs. 7.69 ± 4.75) Significant decrease in EI score only in group B after last treatment (349 ± 62.53 to 320.47 ± 43.72) with no significant decrease in EI in group A | None of severe adverse events | N/A |
| 2017 | Jang, H.W. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, | 28, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–V) | Dual-pulsed 1064 nm QSNY (8 ns, 7 mm, 1.4 J/cm2, irradiated at dual pulses of 0.7 J/cm2, | Single-pulsed 1064 nm QSNY (6 ns, 7 mm, 1.4 J/cm2, 1000 shots) | N/A | 1 w, 8 s | B, +0 | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) after last treatment (A: 5.88 ± 3.16 to 2.52 ± 2.52, B: 5.89 ± 3.15 to 2.45 ± 2.25) Significant increase in L* values (both A and B) after last treatment (A: 62.22 ± 2.73 to 1.30 ± 1.62, B: 62.15 ± 2.99 to 1.17 ± 1.59) No patient-reported differences in patients’ satisfaction between A and B Direct comparisons between A and B after last treatment in objective outcome measures were absent |
Significantly higher pain sensation in group B compared to group A (mean VAS, 3.3 vs. 4.6) None of pigmentary adverse events such as RH and MH | N/A |
| 2016 | Gokalp, H et al. [ | Retrospective | 34, Turkish (Fitzpatrick II–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 2.5 J/cm2) | N/A | N/A | 2 w, 6–10 s | B, +0, +12 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score after last treatment (6.7 ± 3.3 to 3.2 ± 1.6) Patient satisfaction: in A, 20/34 (58.8%) rated themselves having at least a 50% reduction in melasma severity after last treatment | None of severe adverse events | 20/34 (58.8%), 1 year after last session |
| 2016 | Hofbauer Parra, C.A. et al. [ | Prospective | 20, Brazilian (Fitzpatrick III–V) | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 0.8–1.6 J/cm2, | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 10 s | B, +1 w, +1 M, +3 M, +6 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score 1 week and 1 month after last treatment compared with the baseline (7.85 ± 4.24 to 4.33 ± 2.89, 6.43 ± 4.48) No significant decrease in mMASI score 3 and 6 months after last treatment (7.85 ± 4.24 to 7.92 ± 4.49, 7.49 ± 4.51) Histopathologically, a slight, nonsignificant decrease in melanin deposition seen in all layers of the epidermis 1 week after last treatment | N/A | 13/16 (81%), 3 months after last session |
| 2015 | Vachiramo n, V. [ | Prosepictve, randomized, split-face | 15, Thai (Fitzpatrick III–V), all male | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 2.2–2.8 J/cm2, 10 Hz) | 30% GA peeling + QSNY | N/A | 1 w, 5 s | B, +1 M, +2 M, +3 M | N/A |
Significantly lower RL*I in group B compared with A after last session (A: 7.98 ± 0.73 to 6.42 ± 0.63, B: 8.20 ± 0.73 to 4.35 ± 0.63) Significant decrease in mMASI score in group B (20.08 ± 1.99 to 13.00 ± 2.17) after last session with no significant decrease in group A Percentage of patients who rated their response as >75% clearing of melasma: at 4-week follow-up (A: 15.4%, B: 61.5%), at 12-week follow-up (A: 0%, B: 41.7%) | PIH (1), MH (1) | N/A |
| 2015 | Choi, C. P. et al. [ | Retrospective | 360, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–V) | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 2.5–3.0 J/cm2, 10 Hz) | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 2.1–2.5 J/cm2, 10 Hz) + LPNY (7 mm, 0.3 ms, 15–17 J/cm2, 5 Hz) | N/A | 1 w, 10 s | B, +2 M | N/A |
Significantly superior improvement in mMASI score 2 months after last session in group B (median 3.6) compared to group A (median 3.0) Significantly superior improvement in PhGA in group B compared to group A 2 months after last session | MH, RH (A: 25/177, 14.1%, B: 2/183, 1.1%) | N/A |
| 2015 | Choi, C. P. et al. [ | Retrospective | 30, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV), who have aggravated after previous dual toning treatment) | 1064 nm QSNY (6 mm, 2.1–2.5 J/cm2, 10 Hz) + LPNY (0.3 ms, 7 mm, 15–17 J/cm2, 5 Hz) | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 10 s, then maintenance (2 w, 4 s, 4 w, 3 s, 12 w, 1 s) | B, +2 M (before maintenance) | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (10.48 ± 3.64 to 3.22 ± 1.45) 2 months after last session PhGA: 76–100% improvement (80%), 51–75% improvement (20%) | None of pigmentary adverse events such as RH and MH | N/A |
| 2014 | Yun, W.J. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 24, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | IPL (560–800 nm, 13–15 J/cm2) | IPL (560–800 nm, 13–15 J/cm2) | N/A | 2 w, 6 s | B, +1 M, +2 M | N/A |
Significantly greater decrease in partial MASI (for cheeks) score 2 months after treatment in group B compared to group A (A: 12.0 ± 3.33 to 9.17 ± 2.86, B: 12.75 ± 4.58 to 6.50 ± 3.29) Significant decrease in percent change of partial MASI score after treatment in group B compared to the baseline (47% at 1 month & 50% at 2 months after treatment) Significant decrease in MI score in group B (20.1%) with no significant decrease in group A 2 months after treatment Insignificant reduction in EI score (Both A and B) 2 months after treatment | 1st degree burn (1 in group B) | N/A |
| 2014 | Alsaad, S.M. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, split-face | 10, Ethics unspecified (Fitzpatrick II–V) | Microdermabration | Microdermabration | N/A | 4 w, 3 s | B, +1 M, +3 M, +6 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in MASI score (both A and B) 1 month after last session (A: 35%, B: 28%) Significant decrease in MASI score (both A and B) 6 months after last session (A: 28%, B: 23%) No significant difference in MASI score between A and B 1 and 6 months after last session | Significantly higher pain sensation in the group B compared to group A (mean NRS, 1.2 vs. 2.9) | At 3 months after last session, reduction in MASI score was insignificant from baseline in both group A and group B (A: 12%, B: 11%) |
| 2014 | Fabi S.G. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, split-face | 20, Ethics unspecified | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 1–2 J/cm2, 5 Hz, 1–8 passes) | 755 nm QSAL (6–8 mm, 1.8 J/cm2, 5 Hz, | N/A | 1 w, 6 s | B, +2 w, +3 M, +6 M | M(20) |
Significant improvement in mMASI score (both A and B) 24 weeks after last session No significant difference of mMASI score between A and B at any visit until 24 weeks after last session No significant difference of patients’ self-assessment between A and B | No serious adverse events | N/A |
| 2014 | Sim, J.H. et al. [ | Prospective | 50, Korean | 1064 nm QSNY (8 mm, 2.8 J/cm2, 10 Hz) | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 15 s | B, +0 | N/A |
Significant improvement in pigmentation levels by Janus pigment imaging technology system found after last session ([19.66, 18.70, 17.60] to [15.62, 14.12, 13.32] on front, left, and right side, respectively) Both patients and investigators rated treatment outcome as “good improvement” on average with improvement rate of 50–74% | No serious adverse events | N/A |
| 2014 | Lee, D.B. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 52, Korean | 1064 nm QSNY (7 mm, 1.0–1.7 J/cm2, 10 Hz) | 1064 nm QSNY + Jessner’s peel (salicylic acid 14 g, resorcinol 14 g, lactic acid 14 g dissolved in 95% ethanol) | N/A | 2 w, 10 s | B, +0 | N/A |
Significant decrease in MASI score (Both A and B) after last session (A: 8.68 ± 4.06 to 6.22 ± 2.54, B: 8.98 ± 3.72 to 6.05 ± 2.66) No significant difference in reduction in MASI, patients’ self-assessment and PhGA between A and B after last session | Burning sensation in Group B (4/26) | N/A |
| 2013 | Shin, J.U. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 48, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (7 mm, 2 J/cm2) | QSNY 1064 nm (2 J/cm2, 7 mm) + oral TA (750 mg/day) | N/A | A: 4 w, 2 s | B, +1 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score (both A and B) 1 month after last session (A: 7.9 ± 3.9 to 6.0 ± 3.2, B: 7.9 ± 3.7 to 5.0 ± 3.4) Significantly greater reduction in percent change of mMASI score 1 month after last session in group B compared to group A (A: 21.9 ± 18.5%, B: 37.8 ± 23.9%) PhGA: 2/24 (9%) in group A and 5/24 (22%) in group B reported ≥50% improvement 1 month after last session | Oral TA associated gastrointestinal adverse events: heartburn (2, 4.2%), nausea (1, 2.1%) | N/A |
| 2013 | Na, S.Y. et al. [ | Retrospective | 35, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | IPL (10–10.5 J/cm2, 2.5 ms, delay time 10 ms between pulses, double pulses, 555–950 nm) after two weeks, 1064 nm QSNY (2.0–2.5 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz, 7–8 passes) | 1064 nm QSNY (2.0–2.5 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz, 7–8 passes) | N/A | A: IPL 1 time, followed by QSNY 1 w, 4 s | B, +1 w | M(35) |
Significant decrease in MI, EI, and mMASI scores (both A and B) 1 week after last session; in MI, A: 174.08 ± 64.32 to 128.65 ± 41.36, B: 148.80 ± 35.29 to 130.33 ± 28.63, in EI, A: 295.05 ± 47.34 to 238.40 ± 48.67, B: 287.60 ± 55.87 to 255.80 ± 55.87, in mMASI, A: 8.54 to 3.52, B: 7.48 to 3.99 Significantly greater decrease in percent change of MI score 1 week after last session in group A compared to group B (A: 45.44 ± 35.71%, B: 18.47 ± 20.73%) Significantly greater decrease in percent change of mMASI score 1 week after last session in group A compared to group B (A: 59.35 ± 14.94%, B: 45.66 ± 14.75%) | None of pigmentary adverse events such as RH and MH | No recurrence at mean 5.9 months after last session in 12/20 of group A |
| 2013 | Kim, H.S. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, split-face | 26, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (1.2–1.4 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz) | 1064 nm QSNY (1.2–1.4 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz) | N/A | QSNY: 2 w, 10 s | B, +1 M, +3 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in mMASI score 4 and 12 weeks after last session in group B from baseline (4.40 ± 1.57 to 1.47 ± 0.66, 1.85 ± 0.83) Significant decrease in mMASI score 4 and 12 weeks after last session in group A from baseline (4.35 ± 1.41 to 1.51 ± 0.61, 1.77 ± 0.78) No significant difference in mMASI and PhGA between A and B 4 and 12 weeks after treatment Patients’ self-assessment: 65.4% of group A and 73.1% of group B rated themselves as definitely improved | Transient PIH (2, Fitzpatrick V) | N/A |
| 2012 | Na, S.Y. et al. [ | Retrospective | 20, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | IPL (10–10.5 J/cm2, 2.5 ms, delay time 10 ms between pulses, double pulses) | N/A | N/A | IPL 1 time, followed by QSNY 1 w, 4 s | B, +1 w | M(20) |
Significant decrease in MI and EI scores after last session (174.08 ± 64.32 to 128.65 ± 41.36, 295.05 ± 47.34 to 238.40 ± 48.67) Significant decrease in MASI score after last session (8.54 to 3.52, 59.4%) | None of severe adverse events | N/A |
| 2012 | Kauvar, A.N.B. [ | Prospective | 27, Ethics unspecified (Fitzpatrick II-V), refractory to previous treatment (topical, chemical peel, laser) | Microdermabrasion(2 passes over entire face) followed by 1064 nm QSNY (5–7 ns, 1.8–2 J/cm2, 6 mm, in 10 patients, 50 ns, 1.6 J/cm2, 5 mm, in 17 patients) | N/A | N/A | 4 w, 6 s | B, +3 M, +6 M, +12 M | M(27) | PhGA: mean clearance scores (at 3 months follow-up, 3.3, at 6 months follow-up, 3.2, and at 12 months follow-up, 3.3) The correlation between skin type and the percent clearance not significant | None of pigmentary adverse events such as RH and MH | N/A |
| 2012 | Bansal, C. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 60, Indian (Fitzpatrick III–V) | 1064 nm QSNY (0.5–1 J/cm2, 6–8 mm, 10 Hz, 10 passes, fluence increased by 0.1 J/week until 1 J/cm2) | 20% Azelaic acid (AA) cream | Combination of A and B | QSNY: 1 w, 12 s | B, +0 | A: E(3), D(4), M(13) |
Significant decrease in MASI score in all treatment regimens (A, B, C) after last session (A: 21.11 ± 6.91 to 10.11 ± 4.28, B: 15.90 ± 5.49 to 9.68 ± 3.37, C: 18.73 ± 7.53 to 4.94 ± 1.67) Significantly greater improvement of MASI score after last session in group C compared to group A and group B No significant difference of reduction in MASI score after last session between group A and group B | Burning sensation (2, 1 in B, 1 in C), erythema (1, in C) | N/A |
| 2011 | Zhou, X. et al. [ | Prospective | 50, Chinese (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (2.5–3.4 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz, 5 passes) | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 9 s | B, +3 M | E(35), D(6), M(9) |
Significant decrease in MI, MASI scores after last session (69.9 to 44.9, 10.6 ± 5.6 to 4.1 ± 3.9) Significant decrease in percent change of MI, MASI scores after last session (35.8%, 61.3%) Patients’ self-assessment: excellent (54%), good (30%), fair (60%), poor (10%) | None of severe adverse events | 32/50 (64%), in 3 months follow-up |
| 2011 | Suh, K.S et al. [ | Prospective | 23, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–V) | 1064 nm QSNY (5–7 ns, 3–4 J/cm2 for Fitzpatrick III-IV, 2–3 J/cm2 for Fitzpatrick V, 4/6/8 mm, 10 Hz) | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 10 s | B, +0, +1 M, +2 M, +3 M | E(4), M(19) |
Significant decrease in MASI score after last session (14.15 ± 1.47 to 7.57 ± 2.91) and 1, 2, 3 months after last session (8.22 ± 2.90, 8.95 ± 2.92, 10.15 ± 2.70) Significant increase in L* 10 weeks after last session (60.71 ± 2.99 to 61.95 ± 2.14) and 1, 2, 3 months after last session (61.73 ± 2.14, 61.59 ± 2.14, 61.26 ± 2.52) Significant increase in patient’s satisfaction score after last session (2.11 ± 1.01 to 8.88 ± 1.18) and 1, 2, 3 months after last session (7.53 ± 1.40, 7.38 ± 1.41, 7.02 ± 1.34) | Prolonged erythema (3/23) | N/A |
| 2011 | Park, K.Y. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, split-face | 16, Korean | 1064 nm QSNY (2.0–2.3 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz) | 1064 nm QSNY (2.0–2.3 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz) + 30% GA peel (1–2 min) | N/A | QSNY: 1 w, 6 s | B, +0, +1 M, +2 M, +3 M, +4 M, +5 M | N/A |
Significant decrease in MI and mMASI scores after last session (both A and B); in MI, A: 198.06 ± 31.56 to 162.40 ± 24.26, B: 198.41 ± 33.92 to 149.69 ± 30.11, in mMASI, A: 20.7 ± 1.8 to 17.2 ± 1.9, B: 21.2 ± 1.7 to 15.4 ± 1.5) Significantly greater improvement in percent change of MI after last session in group B compared to group A (32.6% vs. 22.0%) PhGA: >50% improvement (A: 31%, B: 69%) 5 months after last session Patients’ self-assessment: 38% of group A and 75% of group B rated themselves in good or excellent improvement 5 months after last session | None of severe adverse events | N/A |
| 2011 | Kar, H.K. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized | 75, Indian | 1064 nm QSNY (0.5–1 J/cm2, 6–8 mm, 10 Hz, 10 passes, fluence increased by 0.1 J/week until 1 J/cm2) | 35% GA peel 1/2/3 min for first 3 sessions, 70% GA peel 1/2/3 min for remaining 3 sessions | Epidermal type: 532 nm QSNY (0.5–1 J/cm2, 4 mm, 2 Hz) | A: 1 w, 12 s | B, +0, +3 M | A: E(13), M(8) |
Significant improvement in MASI score immediately after treatment for all regimens (A: 13.54 ± 7.19 to 7.05 ± 5.24, B: 10.78 ± 6.05 to 6.43 ± 5.0, C: 10.57 ± 5.13 to 8.37 ± 4.18) Significantly greater improvement of MASI score immediately after treatment in group A compared to group C, and in group A compared to B, and in group B compared to group C Worsening of percent change of MASI score 12 weeks after last session in all regimens (13.04%, 13.13%, 13.25%) | MH (6) (1/21 in A, 5/20 in C) | N/A |
| 2011 | Kang, H.Y. et al. [ | Prospective | 30, Korean (Fitzpatrick IV) | N/A | N/A | 2 w, 10–12 s | B, +0, +6 w | N/A | Patients’ self-assessment: 20/30 (67%) patients reported >25% improvement, 7/30 (23%) patients reported 11–25% improvement, 3/30 (10%) reported 0–10% improvement after last session and maintained until 6 weeks after last session | None of severe adverse events | N/A | |
| 2011 | Brown, A.S. et al. [ | Prospective | 21, Ethics unspecified (Fitzpatrick II–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (3–4 J/cm2 for Fitzpatrick II, 2–3 J/cm2 for Fitzpatrick III–IV, 8–10 mm) | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 8 s | B, +0, +3 M | E or M (numbers unspecified) |
Significant decrease in MASI score 8 weeks after last session (4.43 to 1.51). The most significant improvement in MASI score seen between baseline and week 4 (38.6%) PhGA: 19/21 showed 25–100% improvement | N/A | Flare was common 3 months after last session |
| 2010 | Wattanakr ai, P. et al. [ | Prospective, randomized, split-face | 22, Thai (Fitzpatrick III) | Pretreated with 2% HQ cream QD for 2 weeks and followed by 1064 nm QSNY (3.0–3.8 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz) | 2% HQ cream QD | N/A | QSNY: 1 w, 5 s | B, +0, +1 M, +2 M, +3 M | D or M (numbers unspecified) |
Significant decrease in RL*I after last session in group A (4.6 ± 1.9 to 0.6 ± 1.3) Insignificant decrease in RL*I after 7 weeks of topical application in group B (4.3 ± 1.7 to 3.4 ± 1.6) Significantly greater reduction in improvement rate of RL*I after treatment in group A compared to group B Significant decrease in mMASI score after last session in group A (22.3 ± 1.8 to 5.7 ± 0.8) Insignificant decrease in mMASI score after 7 weeks of topical application in group B (21.9 ± 1.8 to 16.6 ± 1.4) Patients’ self-assessment: in group A, 86.4% rated >50% improvement, 13.6% rated 50–75% improved; in group B, 13.6% rated >50% improvement, 36.4% rated 50–75% improved, and 50% rated little or not improved | MH (3/22, Fitzpatrick V) | Partial recurrence (22/22) in 3 months follow-up |
| 2010 | Polnikorn, N. [ | Prospective | 35, Thai, refractory melasma | 1064 nm QSNY (3.0–3.4 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz, 10 passes) + topical 7% alpha arbutin solution | N/A | N/A | QSNY: 1 w, 10 s, then, 4 w, 2 s | B, +2 w (before maintenance), +2 w (after maintenance) | D or M (numbers unspecified) |
PhGA: 26–50% fading of melasma lesions (48.39%), 51–80% reduction in lesions (29.04%) at 10 weeks after treatment initiation PhGA: 51–80% reduction (36.67%), >81% reduction (30%) after additional two subsequent monthly treatments | MH (3/35, 8.6%, spontaneously resolved within a few months) | Recurrence (2/35, 5.7%) |
| 2010 | Jeong, S.Y. et al. [ | Prospective, split-face, cross-over | 13, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | Pretreated with TC cream (4% hydroquinone, 0.05% tretinoin, 0.01% fluocinolone acetonide) for 8 weeks and followed by 1064 nm QSNY (1.5–2.0 J/cm2, 7 mm, 2 passes) | 1064 nm QSNY (1.5–2.0 J/cm2, 7 mm, 2 passes) and followed by TC cream for 8 weeks (reverse sequence of treatment A) | N/A | TC: QD | B, +1 w, +11 M | N/A | (Group A) 8 weeks of topical cream insignificantly reduced MASI score, and the following 8 weeks of QSNY significantly decreased MASI score (3.0 ± 4.14 to 2.09 ± 3.92) L* remained unchanged 8 weeks after topical treatment, but the following 8 weeks of QSNY significantly increased L* (58.74 ± 4.45 to 60.78 ± 4.44) ΔE*ab decreased insignificantly 8 weeks after topical treatment but decreased significantly with the following 8 weeks of QSNY (5.51 ± 2.92 to 3.86 ± 2.37) 8 weeks of QSNY significantly decreased MASI score (3.20 ± 3.49 to 1.74 ± 3.93), the following 8 weeks of topical treatment rather increased MASI score (1.74 ± 3.93 to 2.22 ± 3.82) with insignificant overall improvement L* was insignificantly increased after 8 weeks of QSNY, and the following 8 weeks of topical treatment rather decreased L* insignificantly ΔE*ab decreased significantly 8 weeks after QSNY (4.96 ± 2.70 to 4.69± 2.45) but rather increased after the following 8 weeks of topical treatment | TC: RH (3/13), irritation (4/13) |
In group B, 4/13 (30.8%) showed partial recurrence within 3 months after treatment After 11 months after treatment, mild aggravation (9/13, but no deterioration from the initial condition) |
| 2010 | Choi, M. et al. [ | Prospective | 20, Korean (Fitzpatrick III–IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (2.0–3.5 J/cm2, 6 mm, 10 Hz) | N/A | N/A | 1 w, 5 s | B, +1 M | N/A |
Significant increase in L* score (59.57 ± 3.63 to 60.43 ± 3.03) Significant decrease in MI (201.69 ± 48.92 to 173.47 ± 33.48) | None of severe adverse events | N/A |
| 2009 | Cho, S.B. et al. [ | Retrospective | 25, Korean (Fitzpatrick IV) | 1064 nm QSNY (2.5 J/cm2, 6 mm, 2 passes for entire face or both cheeks, 4–5 J/cm2, 4 mm, 2 passes for melasma lesions) | N/A | N/A | 2 w, average 7 s (range 5–15 s) | B, +2 M | N/A | PhGA: 2/25 (8%) rated improvement <25%, 5/25 (20%) rated improvement of 25–50%, 11/25 (44%) rated improvement of 51–75%, 7/25 (28%) rated improvement of 76–100%Patients’ satisfaction: 18/25 (72%) rated very satisfied or satisfied, 5/25 (20%) rated slightly satisfied, 2/25 (8%) rated unsatisfied | MH (2/25, 8%, not accentuated on Wood’s light) | At least 3 out of 25, 2–6 months after last session |
N/A: non-applicable, PhGA: Physician’s global assessment, MH: mottled hypopigmentation, RH: rebound hyperpigmentation, PIH: postinflammatory hyperpigmentation, PSI: pigmentation and severity index, MPSA: melanin particle substance area, RL*I: relative lightness index.; QSNY: Q-switched Nd:YAG laser, TC: triple combination, TA: tranexamic acid, PSNY: picosecond Nd:YAG laser, LPNY: long-pulsed Q-switched Nd:YAG laser, FEYL: fractional Er:YAG laser, FMR: fractional microneedling radiofrequency, IPL: intense pulsed light, QSAL: Q-switched alexandrite laser, FEGL: fractional Er:Glass laser, AA: azelaic acid, GA: glycolic acid, HQ: hydroquinone.; § w: week interval, s: session, M: months, QD: once daily, BID: twice daily; † B: baseline, +nw: n week(s) after the last session, +nm: n month(s) after the last session, +0 means that evaluation was performed immediately after the last session.; ǂ E: epidermal type, D: dermal type, M: mixed type. * In melasma area severity index (MASI), modified MASI (mMASI), melanin index (MI) and erythema index (EI) using Mexameter®, PSI (pigmentation and severity index), L*I (lightness index), RL*I (relative lightness index), Visioface® score and ΔE*ab (color difference index), the lower the score, the milder the severity is. However, in L* (lightness) score and grade of improvement, the higher the score, the higher the severity is.; ** Transient erythema and swelling after QSNY were all excluded in this table because it usually resolves within minutes to hours spontaneously.
Summaries of the commonly used outcome measures for evaluating melasma.
| Outcome Measures | Definition | Calculation Methods |
|---|---|---|
| MASI | Melasma area and severity index | |
| mMASI | Modified melasma area and severity index | |
| MI | Melanin index | Values on an arbitrary unit (AU) (0–999) measured by reflectance spectrophotometer |
| EI | Erythema index | Values on an arbitrary unit (AU) (0–999) measured by reflection spectrophotometer |
| L* | The lightness | Values measured by colorimeter or spectrophotometer on a gray scale from 0 (black) to 100 (white) |
| L*I | Lightness index | Average of multiple L* measurements from different darkest areas measured by colorimeter or spectrophotometer |
| RL*I | Relative lightness index | The difference of the L*I between normal skin and melasma measured by colorimeter or spectrophotometer |
| ΔE*ab | Color difference |
Summary of highlighted outcomes in this study.
|
LT showed significant improvement in melasma with various rates of occasional MH, RH, or short-term recurrence as adverse events. LT showed superiority to GA peel, HQ cream, or AA cream in efficacy as a monotherapy. Although LT did not show superiority to TC or silymarin cream in efficacy, it seemed to be slightly safer. LT showed significantly better safety profile than 532 nm QSNY when treating melasma. LT using dual-pulsed QSNY (PTP mode) was as effective as conventional LT with better tolerability and safety profile. LT using PNSY did not show superiority to conventional LT in efficacy. However, data is still insufficient on this novel picosecond system. Combination therapy of LT and other EBDs such as FEYL, FMR, PDL, LPNY, and IPL showed superior efficacy to LT alone. In addition, combination with FMR or LPNY lowered the incidence of MH and RH. Combination therapy of LT and FCO2 or FEGL did not show superior efficacy over LT alone. However, combination with FCO2 lowered the incidence of MH. Combination therapy of LT and other non-EBDs such as GA peel, oral TXA, and AA cream showed superior efficacy to LT alone. Combination therapy of LT and Jessner’s or modified Jessner’s peel did not show superiority to LT alone in efficacy. However, combination with modified Jessner’s peel lowered the incidence of MH. |
LT: laser toning, GA: glycolic acid, HQ: hydroquinone, AA: azelaic acid, TC: triple combination, QSNY: Q-switched Nd: YAG laser, MH: mottled hypopigmentation, RH: rebound hyperpigmentation, PTP: photoacoustic twin pulse, PSNY; picosecond Nd: YAG laser, EBD: energy-based device, FEYL: fractional Er: YAG laser, FEGL: fractional Er: Glass laser, FMR: fractional microneedling radiofrequency, LPNY: long-pulsed Nd: YAG laser, FCO2: fractional CO2 laser, TXA: tranexamic acid.