Sequential Treatment of Superficial Basal Cell Carcinomas With Topical Methyl Aminolevulinate Photodynamic Therapy and Imiquimod 5% Cream: A Retrospective Study of Clinical and Cosmetic Outcomes.

Journal: Dermatologic Surgery : Official Publication For American Society For Dermatologic Surgery [Et Al.]
Published:
Abstract

Background: Topical photodynamic therapy (PDT) and imiquimod 5% (IMQ) cream are established treatments for superficial basal cell carcinoma (sBCC). Both have high initial response rates and recurrence rates of up to 37%. Recent studies demonstrate that PDT and imiquimod may act on sBCCs via synergistic immunomodulatory pathways.

Objective: To describe the sequential use of MAL-PDT and imiquimod 5% cream in the treatment of sBCCs and report treatment tolerability, cosmetic outcomes, and efficacy. Materials and

Methods: This is a retrospective case series of patients presenting over a 2-year period with primary sBCC who underwent 2 cycles of topical MAL-PDT, followed by 6 weeks of imiquimod 5% cream. Outcome measures were resolution of the index lesion at 3 months, side effects, cosmetic outcome, and long-term recurrence (LTR).

Results: A total of 17 consecutive patients (n = 17) with a combined 21 sBCCs (n = 21) were included. The median length of follow-up was 72 months (range 24-95 months). Long-term recurrence occurred in 2/21 lesions (10%).

Conclusion: Sequential use of PDT and imiquimod was well tolerated with good cosmetic outcomes. The 10% LTR rate is at the lower end of the range reported for single modality treatment; however, larger samples are required to evaluate efficacy differences.

Authors
Relevant Conditions

Basal Cell Skin Cancer