评估烧蚀分数CO2激光治疗烧伤相关供体疤痕的经验教训。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Cameron S D'Orio, Bonnie C Carney, Jasmine H Wong, Angela Golding, Alison Ross, Melissa M McLawhorn, Rebekah R Allely, Jeffrey W Shupp, Shawn Tejiram, Taryn E Travis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

增生性瘢痕(HTS)仍然是烧伤的合并症,通常需要劈开厚度皮肤移植(STSG),并在移植部位和STSG供体部位(DS)产生症状性HTS。文献支持使用烧蚀分数CO2激光(FLSR)治疗HTS,但许多试验缺乏对照部位和组织水平检查。考虑到FLSR在HTS中的广泛应用,为了随机对照试验(RCT)而授权未治疗的疤痕部位是许多临床医生的困扰。我们使用STSG DS疤痕进行随机分组,而不是在移植部位保留FLSR。患者(n=20)采用FLSR治疗DS瘢痕。DS疤痕随机化,接受6次FLSR治疗,随访,标准护理(SOC)或仅SOC治疗。治疗前,对DS皮肤和正常皮肤(NS)进行表皮水分流失(TEWL)、黑色素指数(MI)、弹性和红斑的评估。连续活检分析表皮厚度,网状脊比(RRR)和乳头状真皮细胞。所有部位,包括一个单独的烧伤疤痕(BS)部位,使用患者和观察者疤痕评估量表(POSAS) -观察者(-O), -患者(-P),温哥华疤痕量表(VSS)和机构疤痕比较量表(SCS)进行评估。治疗前,与正常皮肤相比,DS对照组(DS C)、DS治疗组(DS T)和BS部位色素沉着。与正常皮肤相比,BS部位弹性较差,TEWL增加。与NS相比,DS皮肤细胞增多,网状脊比减少,表皮厚度增加。通过POSAS-O、POSAS-P和VSS,临床观察员和患者认为BS部位比DS皮肤更严重。随着时间的推移,DS C和DS T位点在TEWL、弹性、红斑、MI、细胞性、RRR、表皮厚度、POSAS-O评分、POSAS-P评分、VSS评分或SCS评分方面没有差异。随着时间的推移,烧伤疤痕在TEWL、弹性、红斑、MI、POSAS-O评分、POSAS-P评分和VSS评分方面没有变化。DS C、DS T和BS部位的SCS评分下降表明患者在整个研究过程中感知到所有疤痕的改善。NS和DS皮肤具有内在的生理差异,尽管没有烧伤疤痕与NS的程度。与目前的SOC相比,FLSR可能不会改变DS皮肤的成熟和重塑速度。虽然在激光治疗的BS HTS中观察到疤痕评估的改善,但没有对这些部位进行特异性对照分析。由于移植物和供体部位HTS形成的病理生理差异,在设计评估FLSR效果的随机对照试验时,STSG DS可能不能充分替代BS HTS。先前评估FLSR在烧伤相关HTS中的应用的研究包括低强度的临床试验或病例研究,没有对照部位或组织水平检查,这促使设计了DS疤痕的随机对照试验。然而,这种疤痕类型可能不适合本研究设计。未来的工作应该扩展到细胞外基质形态学和供体部位的转录组学和烧伤疤痕愈合,以更好地了解激光治疗的效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lessons Learned Evaluating Ablative Fractional CO2 Laser for Burn-Related Donor Site Scars.

Hypertrophic scar (HTS) remains a comorbidity of burn injury, often requiring split thickness skin grafting (STSG) and resulting in symptomatic HTS at grafted sites and STSG donor sites (DS). Literature supports the use of ablative fractional CO2 laser (FLSR) to treat HTS, however many trials lack of control sites and tissue-level examinations. Given the widespread adoption of FLSR for HTS, delegation of non-treated scar sites for the sake of randomized controlled trial (RCT) is troubling for many clinicians. We trialed using STSG DS scars for randomization rather than withholding FLSR from HTS at grafted sites. Patients (n=20) were treated for DS scar with FLSR. DS scars were randomized and treated with either 6 FLSR treatments, follow-ups, and standard of care (SOC) or SOC only. Prior to treatment, DS skin and normal skin (NS) were evaluated for trans-epidermal water loss (TEWL), melanin index (MI), elasticity, and erythema. Serial biopsies were analyzed for epidermal thickness, rete ridge ratio (RRR), and papillary dermal cellularity. All sites, including a separate burn scar (BS) site, were evaluated using the patient and observer scar assessment scale (POSAS) -observer (-O), -patient (-P), Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS), and an institutional Scar Comparison Scale (SCS). Prior to treatment, the DS control (DS C), DS treated (DS T), and BS sites were hyperpigmented compared to normal skin. BS was less elastic than all other sites and had increased TEWL compared to normal skin. DS skin had increased cellularity, decreased rete ridge ratios, and increased epidermal thickness compared to NS. Clinician observers and patients perceived the BS site as more severe versus DS skin through the POSAS-O, POSAS-P, and VSS. Over time, DS C and DS T sites were not different in TEWL, elasticity, erythema, MI, cellularity, RRR, epidermal thickness, POSAS-O scores, POSAS-P scores, VSS scores, or SCS scores. Over time, burn scar did not change in TEWL, elasticity, erythema, MI, POSAS-O scores, POSAS-P scores, and VSS scores. Decreased SCS scores within the DS C, DS T, and BS sites indicated patient-perceived improvement in all scars throughout the study time course. NS and DS skin possess inherent physiological differences, though not to the degree of burn scars vs. NS. FLSR may not alter the rate of maturation and remodeling of DS skin compared to current SOC. While improvement in scar assessment was observed in laser-treated BS HTS, no specific control for these sites was analyzed. Due to differences in pathophysiology of HTS formation at grafted and donor sites, the STSG DS may not be an adequate substitute for BS HTS when designing RCTs to evaluate the effect of FLSR. Prior studies evaluating the use FLSR in burn-related HTS consist of low-powered clinical trials or case studies without control sites or tissue level examinations, prompting the design of a RCT in DS scars. However, this scar type may not be suitable for this study design. Future work should extend to extra-cellular matrix morphology and transcriptomics of donor site and burn scar healing to better understand the effects of laser treatment.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
21.40%
发文量
535
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Burn Care & Research provides the latest information on advances in burn prevention, research, education, delivery of acute care, and research to all members of the burn care team. As the official publication of the American Burn Association, this is the only U.S. journal devoted exclusively to the treatment and research of patients with burns. Original, peer-reviewed articles present the latest information on surgical procedures, acute care, reconstruction, burn prevention, and research and education. Other topics include physical therapy/occupational therapy, nutrition, current events in the evolving healthcare debate, and reports on the newest computer software for diagnostics and treatment. The Journal serves all burn care specialists, from physicians, nurses, and physical and occupational therapists to psychologists, counselors, and researchers.
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