Background: Actinic keratoses (AK) may occur in all sun-exposed skin areas. Those occurring outside the head area are generally more resistant to treatment than those on the face.
Objective: To determine efficacy and safety of BF-200 ALA versus vehicle in the treatment of mild-to-severe AK located on extremities, trunk, and neck with red light photodynamic therapy (PDT).
Methods: This phase III study had an intra-individual design with 50 patients in 6 centers in Germany. Each patient received a maximum of 2 field-directed PDTs. Clinical end points and 1-year follow-up results were recorded.
Results: BF-200 ALA was superior to the vehicle with respect to total lesion clearance rates (86.0% vs 32.9%; P < .0001) and patient complete clearance per patient's side (67.3% vs 12.2%, P < .0001). One-year overall lesion recurrence rate was 14.1% versus 27.4% (BF-200 ALA vs vehicle; P = .0068). Patients were more satisfied by the cosmetic outcome of BF-200 ALA/PDT than the vehicle/PDT. Adverse events were consistent with the known safety profile of BF-200 ALA/PDT.
Limitations: Small number of severe lesions; limited sample size; unbalanced but representative distribution of AK.
Conclusion: BF-200 ALA showed significantly higher AK clearance rates on extremities, trunk, and neck than the vehicle and was well tolerated.
Keywords: 5-ALA; AK; Ameluz; BF-200 ALA; BF-RhodoLED; PDT; acral; actinic keratosis; clinical trial; controlled; extremities; neck; photodynamic therapy; randomized; red light; red narrow spectrum lamp; trunk.
Copyright © 2021 American Academy of Dermatology, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.