Conference Coverage

Role of lasers and light sources in medicine continue to expand


 

FROM A LASER & AESTHETIC SKIN THERAPY COURSE

Another use for the intense pulsed-light device, pulsed-dye laser, and potassium titanyl phosphate laser in clinical practice is for treating patients who have dry eye, even if you are not an ophthalmologist, suggests R. Rox Anderson, MD.

Dr. R. Rox Anderson, Director, the Wellman Center for Photomedicine, Boston.

Dr. R. Rox Anderson

“I’ve been doing this in my practice for a number of years and it’s quite gratifying,” Dr. Anderson, a dermatologist who directs the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said during a virtual course on laser and aesthetic skin therapy. “You treat the periorbital skin, mostly under the eye, just as if you were treating telangiectasia rosacea. The meibomian glands under the upper eyelid that cause this disease are sebaceous glands, and most of the people with dry eye have rosacea.”

In a retrospective noncomparative, interventional case series, 78 patients with severe dry eye syndrome were treated with intense pulsed-light therapy and gland expression at a single outpatient clinic over 30 months. Physician-judged improvement in dry eye tear breakup time was found for 87% of patients with an average of seven treatment visits and four maintenance visits, while 93% of patients reported posttreatment satisfaction with the degree of dry eye syndrome symptoms. More information about the approach were published in Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science and Current Opinion in Ophthalmology.

“What’s gratifying here is that most patients will get about 2 months of relief after a single treatment,” Dr. Anderson said. “They are very happy – some of the happiest patients in my practice. Many ophthalmologists don’t have the technology, so I think you can do this depending on your local referral system.”

Light-based approaches are also making promising inroads in cancer treatment. A recent study led by Martin Purschke, PhD, at the Wellman Center evaluated the use of a novel radio-phototherapy approach for killing cancer cells. The center of solid tissue tumors that are treated with radiotherapy is hypoxic, Dr. Anderson explained, “and oxygen is typically located around the perimeter of the tumor. After a radiation therapy treatment, you kill only the outer portion of it, and then the remaining cells grow back, and you end up with the same tumor. This is why you have to do radiation therapy over and over again. In contrast, if you add scintillating nanoparticles, which are particles with a very high C number atoms in them that pick up the x-ray photon and then emit many UV photons from one x-ray photon, they are very efficient at converting x-ray energy to UV energy.” The x-ray, he added, “generates UV light, and the UV light kills the tumor. We’re hoping that we can make a dent in radiotherapy this way.”

Dr. Anderson predicted that fiber lasers, which are highly advanced for industrial applications, will play an increasing role in dermatology and in other areas of medicine. “There are not a new kid on the block anymore but fiber lasers are relatively new to medicine,” he said during the meeting, which was sponsored by Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Wellman Center for Photomedicine. “We are seeing incredible capabilities with fiber lasers: essentially any wavelength, any power, any pulse duration you want. The lasers are efficient, small, rugged, and their lifetime exceeds your lifetime. They are likely to displace many of our old lasers in dermatology. I don’t know when, but I know it will happen.”

He reported having received research funding and/or consulting fees from numerous device and pharmaceutical companies.

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