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The ABC of Photodynamic Therapy

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What are the skin applications of PDT? How to perform PDT - patient ... soaked in saline forceps OR gentle use of a curette OR edge of a scalpel blade. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The ABC of Photodynamic Therapy


1
The ABC of Photodynamic Therapy
  • An overview of topical PDT

2
Photodynamic Therapy
  • What is it?
  • What are the skin applications of PDT?
  • How to perform PDT - patient selection, lesion
    preparation
  • Adverse event profile
  • The future of PDT in Dermatology

3
Photodynamic Therapy (PDT)
  • Photosensitiser (retained in tumour)
  • Visible light - wavelength to activate
    phosensitiser
  • ?
  • Singlet oxygen
  • ?
  • Tumour cell death
  • (necrosisapoptosis)

4
The History of Photodynamic Therapy
  • 1903 - Jesionek/Tappeiner - eosin dye light in
    skin cancer
  • 1942 - Auler/Banzer - tumour-localizing
    properties of porphyrins
  • 1960 - Lipson - localisation of haematoporphyrin
    derivative (HpD) in neoplastic tissue
  • 1978 - Dougherty - HpD-PDT in cutaneous tumours
  • 1990 - Kennedy - Topical ALA-PDT in skin tumours

5
Topical PDT - Photosensitisers (2005, UK)
  • 1. 5-ALA - only one formulation, Levulan (DUSA,
    USA) is approved - for non-hyperkeratotic actinic
    keratoses on the face/scalp by the FDA. Several
    other formulations are available for off-label
    use (e.g. Porphin, Crawfords, UK)
  • 2. Methyl aminolevulinate (MAL) Metvix (Galderma,
    Paris)
  • Esterified derivative, increased
    lipophilicity - 3hr application, improved
    selectivity described.
  • Approved in UK for Thin/non-hyperkeratotic
    and non-pigmented AK face/scalp where other
    therapies are considered less appropriate and for
    superficial and nodular BCC unsuitable for other
    therapies

6
Patient Selection - a personal view
  • Bowens disease (SCC-in situ) - a first-line
    option
  • Large /- multiple AK/Bowens/BCC
  • (Morton et al, Arch Dermatol, 2001 137
    319-24)
  • AKs on acral sites (PDT5-FU)
  • (Kurwa et al, JAAD, 1999, 41, 414-8)

7
Topical PDT - U.K. Guidelines 2002 C.A. Morton
et al, British Photobiology Group, BJD 2002,
146, 552-567
  • A 1 AK (non-hyperkeratotic, face/scalp)
  • A 1 Squamous cell ca. in situ
  • A 1 Superficial BCC (lt2mm)
  • C 11iii Nod. BCC (unless adjunctive Rx
    /fractionation)
  • A There is good evidence to support the use of
    the procedure.
  • C There is poor evidence...
  • I Evidence obtained from at least one randomised
    control trial.
  • IIiii Evidence - multiple time series /- the
    intervention or dramatic results...
  • MAL-PDT studies support A1 rating for all above
    indications

8
MAL-PDT the evidence
  • MAL (Metvix) is currently the only licensed
    topical photosensitiser in the UK
  • Several multi-centre studies support efficacy in
    non-hyperkeratotic actinic keratoses and in BCC
  • M. Szeimies,et al. Photodynamic therapy using
    topical methyl-5-aminolevulinate compared with
    cryotherapy for actinic keratosis A prospective,
    randomized study. JAAD 2002 47258-62.
  • Foley P, et al. A comparison of photodynamic
    therapy using Metvix with cryotherapy in actinic
    keratosis. JEADV, 2001 15 (Suppl 2) 223.
  • Pariser DM, et al. Photodynamic therapy with
    topical methyl aminolevulinate for actinic
    keratoses results of a prospective randomized
    multicenter trial. JAAD. 2003 48227-232.
  • Basset-Sequin N, et al. Photodynamic therapy
    using Metvix is as efficacious as cryotherapy in
    BCC, with better cosmetic results. JEADV, 2001
    15 (Suppl 2) 226
  • Rhodes LE, et al. Photodynamic therapy using
    topical methyl aminolevulinate vs surgery for
    nodular basal cell carcinoma. Arch Dermatol 2004
    140 17-23

9
MAL- PDT Efficacy in NMSC
  • AK equivalent/superior to cryotherapy
  • sBCC equivalent to cryotherapy
  • nBCC equivalent to surgery
  • SCC in-situ equivalent to cryotherapy and 5-FU
  • (Morton C, et al. A placebo controlled
    European study comparing MAL-PDT with
    cryotherapy and 5-fluorouracil in patients with
    Bowens disease. JEADV 2004 18 Suppl
    2 415)
  • Superiority in cosmetic outcome and patient
    preference

10
Lesion preparation for Metvix PDT
  • AK and sBCC
  • Remove scale and crusts and roughen the surface -
    several options gauze soaked in saline ? forceps
    OR gentle use of a curette OR edge of a scalpel
    blade.
  • Nodular BCC
  • Remove overlying epidermal keratin, then gently
    remove exposed tumour material without attempting
    to excise beyond tumour margins (debulking
    curettage - no anaesthesia required)

11
Metvix application
  • MAL cream (1 mm thick) applied to lesion and 510
    mm of surrounding skin
  • Treated area covered with occlusive dressing
  • After 3 hours, dressing removed and area cleaned
    with saline

12
Optimal light delivery
- Longer wavelengths penetrate deeper - light
utilising the 635nm peak of protoporphyrin IX
absorption thus favoured for UK indications of
BCC as well as AK, treated by Metvix. - blue
light source licensed in US for Levulan treatment
of actinic keratoses - Blu-U (DUSA, USA) - red
light sources are probably most versatile for
current indications, but limited comparison
literature. blue light effective in
short-follow-up studies in AK
13
Aktilite
  • LED lamps, 634/-3nm
  • pre-set irradiance
  • Dose 37J/cm2 equivalent to 75J/cm2 broadband
    source
  • from original studies
  • Irradiance 50mW/cm2 at 50mm from lesion
  • Other LED (e.g. Omnilux, PTL, UK) available.
    Several other alternative light sources
    available, but require careful consideration of
    dosimetry conversion.

14
Fluorescence Diagnosis
  • Utilisation of potential for the accumulation of
    fluorescent porphyrins within tumour cells (esp.
    PPIX) to assist determination of tumour
    outlines, recurrences, sub-clinical disease

15
Side-effects and their management - 1
  • Pain/discomfort, often described as burning,
    stinging or prickling restricted to treatment
    area is common
  • Onset in the early part of light exposure,
    peaking within minutes, then leveling out
  • Most patients tolerate topical PDT without pain
    relief
  • Face and scalp and large and/or ulcerated lesions
    may be more likely to be painful
  • Option to reduce pain topical/injected local
    anaesthetic, pre-med., cooling fans or spraying
    water

16
Side-effects and their management - 2
  • Immediately following illumination, erythema and
    oedema are common, with crust formation and
    healing over 2-6 weeks
  • No generalised photosensitivity
  • Hyper- or hypo- pigmentation occasionally seen
  • Hair loss observed for thicker tumours in
    scalp/pubis, but much less than radiotherapy
  • 25 years of porphyrin PDT indicates no confirmed
    carcinogenic risk of topical PDT

17
Topical PDT - Published Reports 2005
  • Acne/sebaceous naevus
  • Actinic cheilitis/leukoplakia
  • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
  • Cutaneous sarcoid
  • Epidermodysplasia verruciformis
  • Hailey-Hailey disease
  • Lichen planus
  • Lichen sclerosis
  • Port wine stains
  • Psoriasis
  • Warts, Condyloma acuminata
  • Scleroderma
  • Actinic keratoses
  • Bowens disease
  • Basal cell carcinoma
  • Naevoid BCC
  • CTCL
  • Erythroplasia of Queyrat

18
Topical PDT - Re-shaping Practice?
  • Proven efficacy of PDT in AK BCC (Bowens)
  • Clinical applications especially for
  • large and/or multiple lesions
  • lesions situated in difficult-to-treat sites
  • Current therapies all have limitations
  • Cosmetic advantages of PDT
  • Future indications will extend the role of PDT

19
Advantages of Topical PDT
  • Relatively selective treatment
  • Non-invasive
  • Multiple lesions may be treated simultaneously
  • Safe
  • Supervised outpatient procedure
  • Repeated treatments possible
  • Minimal or no scarring, good/excellent cosmesis

20
Topical PDT - Conclusion
  • Effective PDT depends on appropriate patient
    selection, lesion preparation, cream application
    and correct light dose delivery
  • Side-effects are comparable to conventional
    therapies and can be effectively controlled
  • Superior cosmesis over standard therapies
  • The reward - efficacy, good cosmesis and a
    satisfied patient
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