| Literature DB >> 36000042 |
Jimin Yang1, Zhongcheng Xie2, Barnabas C Seyler3.
Abstract
Objective: The CO2 laser and 532 nm potassium titanyl phosphate (KTP) laser have been applied to treat recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP). This systematic review sought to compare outcome differences between these two methods. Data Sources: Embase, Web of Science, PubMed, and the Cochrane Library. ReviewEntities:
Keywords: 532 nm potassium titanyl phosphate laser; CO2 laser; laryngeal papillomatosis; recurrent respiratory papillomatosis; systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 36000042 PMCID: PMC9392380 DOI: 10.1002/lio2.871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Laryngoscope Investig Otolaryngol ISSN: 2378-8038
FIGURE 1PRISMA flow diagram
Listing of included studies with relevant details
| Authors (year) | EL | Characteristics | Study type | Lesions | Laser settings | Outcomes | Results | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Castillo et al. (2010) | IV |
N/proc: 29/NA Age: 14 months–84 years old Gender: 10F/19M | Retrospective | Laryngeal papillomatosis |
3–6 W continuous power 100–200 Hz repetition rate | Complications |
| Papillomatosis is characterized as a pathology with an unpredictable course and low probability of malignancy. CO2 laser surgery has meant a revolution in symptomatic treatment, but there is presently no curative treatment. |
| HPV detected |
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| Recurrence |
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| Remission (no recurrence occurred within two months) |
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| Clearance (no recurrence occurred within 3 years) |
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| Cure (no recurrence occurred within 5 years) |
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| Dedo et al. (1982) | IV |
N/proc: 109/548 Age: NA Gender: 43F/66M | Retrospective | Laryngeal papillomatosis | NA | Complications: acute upper airway obstruction |
| Treatment of LP with CO2 laser followed by podophyllum painting represents a clear advance over traditional mechanical methods of papilloma removal when considering voice quality, remission rate, and especially incidence of complications and occurrences of death. |
| Complications: anterior glottic webbing |
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| Remission |
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| Malignant degeneration |
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| Death |
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| Dedo et al. (2001) | IV |
N/proc: 244/548 Age: NA Gender: 81F/163M | Retrospective | Respiratory papillomas |
20 W continuous power 0.2 s to continuous exposure time 1–2 mm spot size | Complications: anterior glottic webbing |
| A true cure with elimination of all human papilloma viruses (particularly types 6 and 11) will not be achieved until a uniformly effective vaccine or antiviral and immunomodulating agents are developed. |
| Remission |
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| Clearance |
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| Cure |
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| Malignant Transformation |
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| Death |
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| Holler et al. (2009) | IV |
N/proc: 6/90 Age: 3–17 years old Gender: 6M | Prospective | Juvenile‐onset recurrent respiratory papillomastosis | NA | Jitter | 4.57% | The data demonstrate a correlation of worsening voice quality with increased exposure to the CO2 laser. |
| Shimmer | 14.66% | |||||||
| NHR | 0.31% | |||||||
| CAPE‐V | 60 | |||||||
| Koji et al. (2019) | IV |
N/proc: 9/14 Age: 30–56 years old Gender: 5 M/4F | Prospective valid‐action | Recurrent respiratory papillomastosis | 2–3 W continuous or super pulse power | Recurrence |
| CO2 TNFLS is feasible as an in‐office surgery for patients with laryngopharyngeal pathologies. The therapeutic outcome is as expected with the advantages of low patient burden and ease of repetition. |
| Hu et al. (2017) | IV |
N/proc: 6/10 Age: NA Gender: NA | Retrospective | Recurrent respiratory papillomastosis | 5 W power in super pulse with 0.05 s on and 0.01 s off | Complications |
| With meticulous patient selection, office‐based laryngeal surgery performed using a CO2 laser appears to be a feasible treatment option for various types of vocal lesions. |
| Incomplete surgery |
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| Intolerance |
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| Preuss et al. (2007) | IV |
N/proc: 64/137 Age: NA Gender: NA | Retrospective | Recurrent respiratory papillomastosis | 25 W | Complications: glottic webs, scar |
| Laser microsurgery is the preferential treatment modality due to the low rate of severe scarring and a lower tracheostomy rate as compared with laryngeal microsurgery with cold instruments. |
| Complications: temporary laryngeal edema |
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| Complications: airway fire |
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| Recurrence, malignant transformation, secondary airway carcinoma |
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| Robb (1987) | IV |
N/proc: 5/11 Age: 2.5–23 years old Gender: 4F/7M | Retrospective | Recurrent laryngeal papilloma | 10–30 W, intermittent or pulsed | Complications |
| Compared to other modalities, laser offers the ability to treat frequently the pediatric larynx, with little risk of postoperative edema or bleeding, reduced hospital in‐patient stays, and only mild discomfort. However, using frequent laser treatment, a small number of severely affected children will require tracheotomy for incipient or overt respiratory obstruction. |
| Remission (more than 1 year) |
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| Intractable airway obstruction |
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| Saleh (1992) | IV |
N/proc: 3/NA Age: 1–7 years old Gender: NA | Retrospective | Recurrent laryngeal papillomatosis | 8–10 W power | Complications |
| NA |
| Mattot et al. (1990) | IV |
N/proc: 37/595 Age: 1–56 years old Gender: 11F/26M | Retrospective | Laryngeal papillomatosis | NA | Complications: carcinoma of larynx |
| Number of operations per year does not correlate with eventual remission. |
| Complications: bronchial papillomata |
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| Remission |
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|
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| Burns et al. (1990) | IV |
N/proc: 37/55 Age: 23–73 years old Gender: 16F/21M | Prospective uncontrolled | Recurrent laryngeal papillomatosis |
15 ms pulse width 5.25–7.5 J/pulse 2 Hz repetition rate 20–80 J/cm2 fluence | Complications |
| KTP laser procedure is useful and safe for recurrent papillomatosis. Most patients had >90% of lesion regression at 4–12 weeks postoperation. |
| >90 regression (4–12 weeks) |
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| 75%–89% regression |
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| 15%–74% regression |
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| Hung et al. (2020) | IV |
N/proc: 16/79 Age: 23–73 years old Gender: 6F/10M | Prospective | Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis |
30–50 ms pulse width 7–8 W 2 Hz repetition rate | Complications | NA | KTP laser can be an effective tool for managing RRP. Voice quality can be well preserved even after a dozen KTP laser procedures. |
|
| ||||||||
| (1) Before operation | 28.3 | |||||||
| (2) After 1st operation | 12.0 | |||||||
| (3) After 2–5 repeated in‐office or in‐hospital procedures | 10.1 | |||||||
| (4) After 6–10 procedures | 11.0 | |||||||
|
| ||||||||
| (1) Before operation | 6.8 | |||||||
| (2) After 1st operation | 10.5 | |||||||
| (3) After 2–5 repeated in‐office or in‐hospital procedures | 10.9 | |||||||
| (4) After 6–10 procedures | 11.3 | |||||||
|
| ||||||||
| (1) Before operation | 5.0 | |||||||
| (2) After 1st operation | 2.4 | |||||||
| (3) After 2–5 repeated in‐office or in‐hospital procedures | 2.4 | |||||||
| (4) After 6–10 procedures | 1.4 | |||||||
| Kaluskar et al. (2009) | IV |
N/proc: 9/NA Age: 39–58 years old Gender: 2F/7M | Prospective uncontrolled | Inverted papilloma of the nose and paranasal sinuses |
8 W of power in continuous mode At least 80% calibration | Complications |
| KTP laser is a good option in view of the low rates of recurrence and the minimal postoperative morbidity |
| Recurrence (1 year) |
| |||||||
| Wei et al. (2014) | IV |
N/proc: 18/33 Age: 12–68 years old Gender: F3/M15 | Retrospective | Recurrence laryngeal papilloma | 6 W of power | Complications |
| KTP laser is safe and effective in the treatment of recurrent laryngeal papilloma. |
| Cure |
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| Effective (tumor remission rate >50%) |
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| Ineffective (tumor remission rate <50%) |
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| Liu et al. (2005) | IV |
N/proc: 22/NA Age: 3–60 years old Gender: NA | Retrospective | Laryngeal papilloma | NA | Complications |
| KTP laser treatment is less destructive, with high accuracy and precision, and good hemostatic effect. |
| Cure |
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| Recurrence |
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Preoperative study characteristics
| Outcome | KTP laser | Patients | CO2 laser | Patients |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 49.83 ± 7.05 | 91 | 34.83 ± 7.36 | 85 |
|
| Male | 65.61% (292 of 445) | 445 | 66.25% (53 of 80) | 80 | >.05 |
Between group KTP and group CO2. Bold indicates statistically significant.
Values are presented as mean ± SD.
Comparison of clinical outcomes. Not Reported (NR) refers to clinical outcomes that were not reported.
| Outcome | KTP laser | Surgery/patients | CO2 laser | Surgery/patients |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cure | 87.25% (89 of 102) | 102 | 75.98% (389 of 512) | 512 |
|
| Complications | 2.33% (2 of 86) | 86 | 17.71% (88 of 497) | 497 |
|
| Recurrence | 10.87% (10 of 92) | 92 | 18.63% (19 of 102) | 93 | .1595 |
| Remission | 88.46% (46 of 52) | 52 | 38.90% (156 of 401) | 401 |
|
| HPV‐detected | NR | NR | 75.86% (22 of 29) | 29 | |
| Clearance | NR | NR | 9.88% (25 of 253) | 23 |
Between group KTP and group CO2. Bold indicates statistically significant.
FIGURE 2Comparison of KTP and CO2 laser for treating laryngeal papillomatosis/ recurrent respiratory papillomatosis