Efficacy and therapeutic reactions of tri-needle-pretreatment combined with painless ALA-PDT for the treatment of moderate-to-severe acne vulgaris: A randomized controlled trial.
Background: Our clinical experience suggests that pretreatment of the original lesions may be crucial for enhancing the efficacy of 5-aminolevulinic acid-photodynamic therapy (ALA-PDT) in moderate-to-severe acne vulgaris. We performed this randomized controlled trial (RCT) to validate this observation.
Methods: Efficacy and therapeutic reactions between tri-needle-pretreatment with ALA-PDT (TP-PDT) and conventional ALA-PDT without pretreatment (NP-PDT) were compared. In TP-PDT group, tri-needle-pretreatment was performed using comedone extractors, fire needles, or plum-blossom needles, according to the lesion type. In the TP-PDT group, 5% ALA cream was applied to lesions 30 min before illumination (LED red light: 633±10 nm, 40 mW/cm2, 150 J/cm2). In the NP-PDT group, 5% ALA cream was applied 1 h before illumination (60 mW/cm2, 72 J/cm2). Patients underwent four sessions, at 1-week intervals. The efficacy was evaluated as the proportion of patients achieving a remarkable effective rate, based on the reduction in the number of lesions. A numeric rating scale was used to assess the severity of pain, erythema, and edema.
Results: Forty-eight patients completed the trial. The proportion of remarkable effective rate was significantly greater and the pain score was significantly lower for the TP-PDT than NP-PDT group. The edema score was significantly higher for the TP-PDT than NP-PDT group. There was no difference in erythema scores between the two groups.
Conclusions: The tri-needle-pretreatment can improve the efficacy of ALA-PDT, without an increase in pain, for the treatment of moderate-to-severe acne vulgaris. These qualities make the TP-PDT a promising gold standard pretreatment for ALA-PDT for acne vulgaris.