Er:YAG Ablative Fractional Laser Assisted-Photodynamic Therapy Versus Photodynamic Therapy for Basal Cell Carcinoma
Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma focused on measuring Nodular basal cell carcinoma, Er:YAG, AFL-assisted, MAL-PDT
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- patient's request for alternative treatment due to the lower cosmetic outcomes of surgery
- difficulty to surgical excision due to bleeding abnormalities or cardiac problems
Exclusion Criteria:
- patients with more than 5 eligible lesions
- lesions deeper than 2mm in depth
- lesions located in the midface region, nose, orbital areas, and ears
- lesions with a longest diameter of less than 6 mm or more than 15mm
- infiltrative BCC
- morpheaform BCC
- known allergies to the MAL cream or lidocaine
- pregnancy
- lactation
- any active systemic infectious disease
- immunosuppressive treatment
- personal history of malignant melanoma
- tendency towards melasma or keloid formation
- prior treatment of the lesions within 4 weeks
- any indication of poor compliance
Sites / Locations
- Dong-A University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Er:YAG AFL-PDT
MAL-PDT
AFL was performed using a 2940-nm Er:YAG ablative fractional laser (Joule, Sciton Inc., CA, UA) at 550-600 µm ablation in depth, level 1 coagulation, 22% treatment density, and a single pulse. Immediately afterwards, a 1-mm thick layer of MAL (16% Metvix® cream, PhotoCure ASA, Oslo, Norway) was applied to the lesion and to 5 mm of surrounding healthy tissue. The area was covered with an occlusive dressing (Tegaderm, 3M, Saint Paul, MN, US) for 3 hours, after which the remaining cream was removed with saline gauze, and the red fluorescence of porphyrins was visualized with Wood's light. Each treatment area was then separately illuminated with red light-emitting diode (LED) lamps (Aktilite CL128; Galderma, Bruchsal, Germany) with peak emission at 632 nm and total light dose of 37 J cm2.
Immediately afterwards, a 1-mm thick layer of MAL (16% Metvix® cream, PhotoCure ASA, Oslo, Norway) was applied to the lesion and to 5 mm of surrounding healthy tissue. The area was covered with an occlusive dressing (Tegaderm, 3M, Saint Paul, MN, US) for 3 hours, after which the remaining cream was removed with saline gauze, and the red fluorescence of porphyrins was visualized with Wood's light. Each treatment area was then separately illuminated with red light-emitting diode (LED) lamps (Aktilite CL128; Galderma, Bruchsal, Germany) with peak emission at 632 nm and total light dose of 37 J cm2. Areas which were scheduled to receive MAL-PDT received the second treatment 7 days later.