Efficacy and safety of fractional 1064‐nm picosecond laser for atrophic traumatic and surgical scars: A randomized, single‐blinded, split‐scar‐controlled study

Author:

Disphanurat Wareeporn1ORCID,Charutanan Nipathorn1,Sitthiwatthanawong Pradtana1,Suthiwartnarueput Worapop2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology Thammasat University Pathum Thani Thailand

2. Department of Pathology and Forensic Medicine Thammasat University Pathumthani Thailand

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveA fractional 1064‐nm picosecond laser is an efficient and safe treatment for atrophic acne scars. However, evidence of using a picosecond laser for atrophic posttraumatic and surgical scar therapy is lacking. This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of using a 1064‐nm picosecond laser with a microlens array (MLA) for the treatment of atrophic posttraumatic and surgical scars.MethodsThis was a prospective, intraindividual, single‐blinded, randomized split‐lesion‐controlled trial. Twenty‐five subjects with atrophic traumatic or surgical scars that existed for more than 1 year were enrolled. All atrophic scars were divided at the midline into two halves and randomly assigned to a treatment or control side. The treatment group was treated with a 1064‐nm picosecond laser with an MLA handpiece (spot size: 6–8 mm, fluence: 1.0–1.2 J/cm2, repetition rate: 5 Hz, three passes) for 3 monthly sessions. The scar volumes were objectively measured using a three‐dimensional (3D) photograph at baseline, 1 month after the first and second treatments, and 3 and 6 months after the final treatment. Subjective assessments were conducted by a blinded dermatologist and patients' self‐assessment to evaluate improvements at 3 months after the final treatment.ResultsThe treated sides exhibited a significant volume reduction, with statistically significant improvements over the control group at 1 month after the first and second treatments and at 3 months after the final treatment (p = 0.024, 0.005, and 0.019, respectively). At 3 months after the final treatment, a blinded dermatologist correctly identified the treated side in 24 of 25 patients (96%). The patients rated the improvements as excellent (>75%) and marked (50%–75%) in 36% and 48% of patients, respectively.ConclusionAt 3 months, the 1064‐nm picosecond laser with a fractionated MLA can significantly reduce the posttraumatic and postsurgical atrophic scar volume in patients with Fitzpatrick skin types III‐V. Insufficient data preclude inferences regarding efficacy at 6 months.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Dermatology,Surgery

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