New research published in Dermatologic Surgery indicates that simple laser treatments to the skin may help to prevent the development of basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, collectively known as keratinocyte carcinoma.
Conducted by a team of researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital, a founding member of Mass General Brigham, the work describes an easy-to-implement strategy to protect skin health.
Nonablative fractional lasers (NAFL) deliver heat in a fractional manner that leaves it fully intact after treatment, unlike ablative fractional lasers that remove the top layer of skin. Currently they are used to treat things such as scars, sun-damaged skin and age spots, but their effectiveness for preventing skin damage is unknown.
To investigate, Mathew Avram, MD, JD, director of the Mass General Dermatology Laser & Cosmetic Center, and his colleagues studied patients who had been successfully treated for facial keratinocyte carcinoma in the past. Such patients have a 35% risk of experiencing a subsequent keratinocyte carcinoma within 3 years and a 50% risk within 5 years.
In the study, 43 patients received NAFL therapy and 52 served as controls and did not receive NAFL therapy.
The rate of subsequent facial keratinocyte carcinoma development over an average follow-up of more than 6 years was 20.9% in NAFL-treated patients and 40.4% in controls, indicating that patients treated with NAFL had about half the risk.
Controlling for age, gender, and skin type, control patients were 2.65-times more likely to develop a new facial keratinocyte carcinoma than NAFL-treated patients.
Also, among patients who developed a facial keratinocyte carcinoma, the time to development was significantly longer in patients treated with NAFL compared with untreated patients.
“These findings suggest that NAFL treatment may have an important role in protecting against subsequent keratinocyte carcinomas,” says Avram.
“While the mechanism of NAFL’s protective effect is not completely understood, it is suspected that NAFL treatment reduces the overall burden of photo damaged keratinocytes and may promote a wound healing response, which gives healthy skin cells a selective advantage.”
Avram noted that additional studies are warranted to more critically assess the role of NAFL in skin cancer prevention, to reveal the duration of its protective effects, and to determine optimal treatment parameters.
“Based on this research, it’s encouraged for patients to have nonablative laser treatments to help prevent skin cancer if they are at risk or notice abnormalities,” says Avram.
Source: Massachusetts General Hospital