Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03325803
Other study ID # DAUderma-08
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
First received October 26, 2017
Last updated October 29, 2017
Start date September 1, 2015
Est. completion date September 20, 2017

Study information

Verified date October 2017
Source Dong-A University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Er:YAG ablative fractional laser-assisted photodynamic therapy (AFL-PDT) has shown significant benefit for the treatment of actinic keratosis(AK). Er:YAG ablative fractional laser ablates the epidermis and dermis without significant thermal injury, creating microscopic ablation zones (MAZ) in the portion of the skin that the laser is applied to. The formed MAZ depends on the laser parameters such as laser depth, laser density and laser passes, which affect the treatment outcome.


Description:

The investigators aimed to investigate whether the use of increased laser ablative depth affects the efficacy, side effects, cosmetic outcomes, and PPIX accumulation of AFL-PDT for facial AK in a randomized clinical trial.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 45
Est. completion date September 20, 2017
Est. primary completion date September 30, 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 60 Years to 85 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Korean patients aged = 18 years who had biopsy-confirmed Actinic keratosis lesions

Exclusion Criteria:

- photosensitivity disorder patients

- lactating or pregnant women

- patients with porphyria or a known allergy to any of the constituents of the MAL cream and lidocaine

- patients with systemic disease, history of malignant melanoma, tendency of melasma development or keloid formation, any AK treatment of the area in the previous 4 weeks, or any conditions associated with a risk of poor protocol compliance; and patients on immunosuppressive treatment

Study Design


Intervention

Drug:
lidocaine/prilocaine (5%) application
For AFL pre-treatment, lidocaine/prilocaine (5%) cream (EMLA; Astra Pharmaceuticals, LP, Westborough, MA, USA) was applied to the treatment area under occlusion for 30 min
Device:
2940-nm Er:YAG AFL pretreatment
After the anaesthetic cream was removed, AFL therapy was performed using a 2940-nm Er:YAG AFL (Joule; Sciton Inc., Palo Alto, CA, USA) at 150 µm ablation depth, level 1 coagulation, 22% treatment density and a single pulse
Drug:
MAL application
Immediately after AFL treatment, an approximately 1- mm-thick layer of MAL (Metvix, PhotoCure ASA, Oslo, Norway) was applied to the lesion and on 5 mm of surrounding normal tissue. Incubation time is 3 hours
Other:
Measurements of the fluorescence intensity
After 3 hours of application with MAL, saline wash was performed and fluorescence imaging analysis was performed with ultraviolet examination light (model 31602,356 nm; Burton Medical Products Crop.) at 10 cm height above the base of each lesion. The red fluorescence (610 nm-700 nm) was separated and extracted by Matlab program and then used to measure the amount of 633 nm fluorescence of protoporphyrin IX.
Device:
irradiation with red light-emitting diode lamp
After incubation for 3 hours, the dressing and cream were removed, and the area was cleansed with saline. The area was irradiated with a red light-emitting diode lamp (Aktilite CL 128; PhotoCure ASA, Oslo, Norway) with peak emission at 632 nm, placed 5 cm away from the skin surface, and a total light dose of 37 J/cm-2. All patients wore protective goggles during illumination.

Locations

Country Name City State
Korea, Republic of Dong-A University Busan, Seo-gu, Korea, Republic of, 602-715

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Dong-A University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Korea, Republic of, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Differences of short-term complete response rates between 3 groups Lesion responses were classified as either a complete response (complete disappearance of the lesion) or a noncomplete response (incomplete disappearance) Short-term complete response rates were evaluated at 3 months after treatment
Primary Differences of long-term complete response rates between 3 groups In all cases of complete response, the patients were reviewed at 12 months to check for recurrence. Recurrence was assessed by inspection, dermoscopy, photography, palpation, and histologic findings. For the histopathologic evaluation of treatment response, at the 12-month follow-up visit, a 3-mm punch biopsy of the treated AK lesion was performed in all cases of clinically incomplete response. Long-term complete response rates were evaluated at 12 months
Primary Difference of the recurrence rates between 3 groups In all cases of complete response, the patients were reviewed at 12 months to check for recurrence. Recurrence was assessed by inspection, dermoscopy, photography, palpation, and histologic findings. For the histopathologic evaluation of treatment response, at the 12-month follow-up visit, a 3-mm punch biopsy of the treated AK lesion was performed in all cases of clinically incomplete response. Recurrence rates were evaluated respectively at 12 months after treatment
Primary Differences of the fluorescence intensity between 3 groups After 3 hours of application with MAL, Fluorescence imaging analysis was performed on treatment area with ultraviolet examination light (model 31602,356 nm; Burton Medical Products Crop.) at 10 cm height above the base of each lesion. The red fluorescence was separated and extracted by Matlab program and then used to measure the amount of 633 nm fluorescence of protoporphyrin IX. After 3 hours of application with MAL, fluorescence intensity imaging was assessed 10 minutes before illumination.
Secondary Differences of cosmetic outcomes between 3 groups Cosmetic outcomes were graded as excellent (slight redness or pigmentation change), good (moderate redness or pigmentation change), fair (slight-to-moderate scarring, atrophy, or induration), or poor (extensive scarring, atrophy, or induration) The overall cosmetic outcome was assessed 12 months after treatment
Secondary Difference of adverse events (erythema, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, edema, itching, oozing, bleeding) rates between 3 groups Adverse events reported by the patient were noted at each follow-up visit, including severity, duration and need for additional therapy. All events due to PDT were described as phototoxic reactions (i.e., erythema, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, oedema, itching, oozing, bleeding and so forth). Within 12 months after each treatment
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02976727 - Efficacy of Topical Calcipotriol-assisted AFL-PDT in Actinic Keratosis Phase 1