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UnknownNCT04813419

2940nm Er:YAG Laser and 1927nm Thulium Laser in Improving Atrophic Acne Scars

Efficacy and Safety Comparison Between Fractional 2940nm Er:YAG Laser and Fractional 1927nm Thulium Laser in the Treatment of Facial Atrophic Acne Scars

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (estimated)
Sponsor
Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Fractional non-ablative laser (FNAL) has been widely used in improving acne scarring. However, there was only one study reported efficacy and safety of the fractional non-ablative 1927nm thulium laser (FTL) and no studies have reported a comparison between FTL and fractional ablative 2940nm Er:YAG laser(FEL), which had been proved effective and safety in many studies. Thus, we designed a prospective, simultaneous spilt-face trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of FTL in the treatment of acne scarring and make a comparison between FTL and FEL, hoping to provide a new available modality for patients who are intolerable or reluctant to ablative lasers.

Detailed description

Acne vulgaris is a chronic and recalcitrant inflammation of pilosebaceous unit that has a high incidence rate in adolescence and even adults. Acne scarring is not an uncommon cosmetic complication which will cause physical and phycological pressure and impair the life quality of patients. It can be divided into two types according to morphology: atrophic and hypertrophic acne scarring. Atrophic acne scarring can be subclassified into boxcar, icepick and rolling scarring due to morphological features. Although a great variety of modalities to treat atrophic acne scarring such as chemical peeling, lasers and light, micro-needling and radiofrequency have emerged, fractional laser (FL) have come out on top. Unlike resurfacing lasers, FL creates three-dimensional, evenly distributed "microscopic thermal zones(MTZs)"on the treating area, which only covering about 3-40% of the skin and leaving the surrounding tissue undamaged and serving as "cell reservoir". Then, the MTZs can be rapidly replaced by keratinocytes in "cell reservoir" within the first 24 hours and by new collagen within 3-6 months. FL can be categoried into fractional ablative laser(FAL) and fractional non-ablative laser(FNAL). With a wavelength of 2940nm, FEL could be highly absorbed by water-containing tissues of skin and cause superficial epidermis ablation and collagen induction\[4\]. But thermal damage is limited to about 20-50um. FTL has a moderate affinity for water content tissue. Thus, rather than causing epidermis turnover, it keeps the epidermis intact. But it can penetrate deep into 200-300um and stimulate collagen regeneration. Prior studies have shown that both FAL and FNAL were effective in treating acne scarring and the former were more effective while the latter had less side effects. However, in our clinic, we have observed outstanding effect and high satisfaction rate of FTL in improving atrophic acne scarring. Since there was only one clinical trial reported the efficacy and safety of FTL in Asian and no study have made a comparison between FTL and FEL, we designed this prospective, simultaneous spilt-face trial, hoping to provide a new available modality for patients who are intolerable or reluctant to ablative lasers.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICE1927nm thulium laserThe right face of subjects were treated with fractional 2940nm Er:YAG laser(MCL 31 Asclepion Laser Technologies, Germany), N25 mode. Energy was adjusted from 12 to 27J according to the severity of scarring. The left face of subjects were treated with fractional 1927nm thulium laser(Lavieen, korea). Parameters were set as stamp mode, a spot size of 5\*5mm, a pulse time of 1000us, an energy intensity of 3645mJ/cm2 and a repetition of 1-3 times. All patients received 3 treatment sessions totally at an average interval of 4 to 6 weeks.
DEVICE2940nm Er:YAG laserThe right face of subjects were treated with fractional 2940nm Er:YAG laser(MCL 31 Asclepion Laser Technologies, Germany), N25 mode. Energy was adjusted from 12 to 27J according to the severity of scarring. All patients received 3 treatment sessions totally at an average interval of 4 to 6 weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2020-06-11
Primary completion
2021-03-20
Completion
2021-04-01
First posted
2021-03-24
Last updated
2021-03-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04813419. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

2940nm Er:YAG Laser and 1927nm Thulium Laser in Improving Atrophic Acne Scars (NCT04813419) · Clinical Trials Directory