Can topically applied optical clearing agents increase the epidermal damage threshold and enhance therapeutic efficacy

2004 
Lasers in Surgery and Medicine 35:93–95 (2004) Letter to the Editor Can Topically Applied Optical Clearing Agents Increase the Epidermal Damage Threshold and Enhance Therapeutic Efficacy? Human skin is a complex and highly scattering medium at visible and near-infrared wavelengths due to variations in refractive indices of different constituents. In light- based therapeutics, epidermal and dermal scattering diminishes the depth of light penetration and attenuates the effective fluence that reaches the targeted chromo- phores [1]. As a result, higher radiant exposures or fluences may be required to produce the desired therapeutic effect, particularly for more deeply located chromophores. Higher fluences can be beneficial but also increase the risk of epidermal and dermal injury, which can result in dyspig- mentation and scarring. Epidermal injury can be reduced by topically applying certain hyperosmotic solutions prior to laser therapy, such as sucrose, glycerol, and water soluble gels (e.g., surgilube) that have a refractive index matching closely to that of stratum corneum, i.e., 1.4. Thus, surface scattering from incident light is thereby reduced and the overall intensity of backscattered light is also reduced in the superficial epidermis. However, such solutions are highly hydro- philic and penetrate intact skin very poorly when applied topically [2–4]. Our group has recently reported the use of topically applied hyperosmotic, optical clearing agents composed of a pre-polymer mixture of polypropylene glycol and polyethy- lene glycol, PPG:PEG that can penetrate intact human skin [5] and temporarily alter local optical properties in vivo. Epidermal and papillary dermal scattering events are reduced significantly and more light penetrates deeper into the skin. Moreover, reduced epidermal and dermal back scattering increases the threshold for epidermal injury, which allows safe use of higher fluences. In conclusion, by changing the optical properties of human skin in vivo and reducing epidermal and dermal scattering, more photons will reach deeply located chromophores such as hair follicles, tattoo pigments, sebaceous glands, and blood vessels more effectively. In this letter, we present the use of a topically applied clearing agent (PPG:PEG) prior to Q-switched 532 and 694 nm laser treatment of human skin ex vivo and in vivo, respectively. Freshly excised skin samples (skin phototype, SPT III) were obtained and randomly divided into three groups. Group I served as control and no topical agents were applied prior to laser exposure. For group II, an index matching lotion (surgilube, refractive index 1.38) was s 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. topically applied on skin samples prior to laser exposure. For group III, a clearing agent (PPG:PEG, refractive index ¼ 1.47) was topically applied prior to laser exposure. Frequency doubled, Q-switched Nd:YAG laser, (l ¼ 532 nm) was used at a fluence of 2.8 J/cm 2 with a 2 mm diameter spot size to create a single pass of exposures on skin samples. Punch biopsies were obtained immediately after laser exposure and processed for fresh frozen sectioning and hematoxylin and eosin staining (HE area (1) control, no agent or laser treatment; (2) laser alone; (3) skin pre-treated with optical clearing agent (2 hours under occlusion) followed by laser treatment (Fig. 2A). No post-operative wound care was provided for any areas. One day post-treatment, the patient developed several hemor- rhagic blisters on area 2 while area 3 showed only minimal Contract grant sponsor: Arnold and Mabel Beckman Fellows Program (to BC); Contract grant sponsor: National Institutes of Health (to JSN); Contract grant numbers: 47551, 48458; Contract grant sponsor: National Institutes of Health (to JSN); Contract grant number: 002495; Contract grant sponsor: Dermatology Foundation (to KMK). *Correspondence to: Misbah H. Khan, MD, Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic, University of California, Irvine, California 92612. E-mail: mhkhan@uci.edu Accepted 13 May 2004 Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/lsm.20078
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    7
    References
    47
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []