Danny Zakria, Milaan Shah, Joshua Burshtein, Brian Berman, Neal Bhatia, Roger Ceilley, Aaron Farberg, M. Lebwohl, Dawn Merritt, Keyvan Nouri, Linda Stein Gold, Darrell Rigel
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While lesion-directed therapy such as cryosurgery can effectively treat individual actinic keratoses it does not treat subclinical lesions or field cancerization. \nObjective: To create consensus recommendations on the role of field cancerization in selecting appropriate therapy for actinic keratoses. \nMethods: A comprehensive literature search of PubMed, Google Scholar, and Embase was conducted using the keywords “actinic keratos*,” “treatment,” and “field cancerization” for English-language original research articles without date restrictions. Articles were included that either discussed the role of FC in treating AKs or compared various AK field therapies. The relevant articles were then distributed to a panel of nine dermatologists with significant expertise in managing AKs. Each panelist reviewed the articles and assigned them a level of evidence based on Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SORT) criteria. The panel then convened on to discuss the studies and develop consensus statements on the role of FC in selecting AK therapy. The panel utilized a modified Delphi process to approve the adoption of each statement and gave each one a strength of recommendation based on SORT criteria. \nResults: The initial literature search produced 243 articles that met search criteria. After a thorough screening of these articles for relevance to the research question, 21 articles were chosen to be reviewed by the panel and assigned a level of evidence. Of the 21 articles that were reviewed, the panel assigned level 1 evidence to three articles, level 2 evidence to six articles, and level 3 evidence to twelve articles. The panel created seven consensus statements related to AK management and FC. All seven statements received a unanimous (9/9) vote for adoption. Each of the statements was given a strength of recommendation according to sort criteria \nConclusion: Field cancerization due to chronic ultraviolet exposure leads to subclinical AK lesions in addition to lesions that are clinically apparent. In order to address these lesions, field therapy is an important component of an adequate regimen and can be used in conjunction with lesion-directed therapy for optimal results.","PeriodicalId":22013,"journal":{"name":"SKIN The Journal of Cutaneous Medicine","volume":"61 21","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Role of Field Cancerization in Selecting Therapies for Actinic Keratosis: An Expert Consensus Panel\",\"authors\":\"Danny Zakria, Milaan Shah, Joshua Burshtein, Brian Berman, Neal Bhatia, Roger Ceilley, Aaron Farberg, M. Lebwohl, Dawn Merritt, Keyvan Nouri, Linda Stein Gold, Darrell Rigel\",\"doi\":\"10.25251/skin.8.3.1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Background: Actinic keratosis is a very common disease that affects over 40 million people in the United States. In addition to the clinically visible lesion, patients may present with surrounding field cancerization based on their history of ultraviolet exposure. While lesion-directed therapy such as cryosurgery can effectively treat individual actinic keratoses it does not treat subclinical lesions or field cancerization. \\nObjective: To create consensus recommendations on the role of field cancerization in selecting appropriate therapy for actinic keratoses. \\nMethods: A comprehensive literature search of PubMed, Google Scholar, and Embase was conducted using the keywords “actinic keratos*,” “treatment,” and “field cancerization” for English-language original research articles without date restrictions. Articles were included that either discussed the role of FC in treating AKs or compared various AK field therapies. The relevant articles were then distributed to a panel of nine dermatologists with significant expertise in managing AKs. Each panelist reviewed the articles and assigned them a level of evidence based on Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SORT) criteria. The panel then convened on to discuss the studies and develop consensus statements on the role of FC in selecting AK therapy. The panel utilized a modified Delphi process to approve the adoption of each statement and gave each one a strength of recommendation based on SORT criteria. \\nResults: The initial literature search produced 243 articles that met search criteria. After a thorough screening of these articles for relevance to the research question, 21 articles were chosen to be reviewed by the panel and assigned a level of evidence. Of the 21 articles that were reviewed, the panel assigned level 1 evidence to three articles, level 2 evidence to six articles, and level 3 evidence to twelve articles. The panel created seven consensus statements related to AK management and FC. All seven statements received a unanimous (9/9) vote for adoption. Each of the statements was given a strength of recommendation according to sort criteria \\nConclusion: Field cancerization due to chronic ultraviolet exposure leads to subclinical AK lesions in addition to lesions that are clinically apparent. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:日光性角化病是一种非常常见的疾病,美国有 4000 多万人患病。除了临床可见的病变外,患者还可能因紫外线照射史而出现周围区域癌变。虽然冷冻手术等针对病变的治疗方法可以有效治疗单个的日光性角化病,但不能治疗亚临床病变或野外癌变。目标:就场癌化在选择适当的光化性角化病疗法中的作用提出共识性建议。方法:使用关键词 "光化性角化病*"、"治疗 "和 "视野癌化 "对 PubMed、Google Scholar 和 Embase 中的英文原创研究文章进行了全面的文献检索,没有日期限制。收录的文章要么讨论了 FC 在治疗 AK 中的作用,要么比较了各种 AK 现场疗法。然后,将相关文章分发给由九位在治疗 AK 方面具有丰富专业知识的皮肤科专家组成的小组。每位专家组成员都对文章进行了审阅,并根据推荐强度分类标准(SORT)对文章进行了证据等级划分。然后,专家小组召开会议讨论这些研究,并就 FC 在选择 AK 治疗中的作用达成共识。专家小组采用改良的德尔菲程序批准通过每项声明,并根据 SORT 标准对每项声明给出推荐强度。结果:通过初步文献检索,共有 243 篇文章符合检索标准。在对这些文章与研究问题的相关性进行彻底筛选后,专家小组选择了 21 篇文章进行审查,并确定了证据等级。在审查的 21 篇文章中,专家小组为 3 篇文章评定了 1 级证据,为 6 篇文章评定了 2 级证据,为 12 篇文章评定了 3 级证据。专家小组制定了七项与 AK 管理和 FC 相关的共识声明。所有七项声明均获得一致通过(9/9)。每项声明都根据分类标准给出了推荐强度 结论:长期紫外线照射导致的野外癌变,除了临床表现明显的病变外,还会导致亚临床 AK 病变。为了治疗这些病变,野外疗法是适当治疗方案的重要组成部分,可与病变导向疗法结合使用,以达到最佳效果。
The Role of Field Cancerization in Selecting Therapies for Actinic Keratosis: An Expert Consensus Panel
Background: Actinic keratosis is a very common disease that affects over 40 million people in the United States. In addition to the clinically visible lesion, patients may present with surrounding field cancerization based on their history of ultraviolet exposure. While lesion-directed therapy such as cryosurgery can effectively treat individual actinic keratoses it does not treat subclinical lesions or field cancerization.
Objective: To create consensus recommendations on the role of field cancerization in selecting appropriate therapy for actinic keratoses.
Methods: A comprehensive literature search of PubMed, Google Scholar, and Embase was conducted using the keywords “actinic keratos*,” “treatment,” and “field cancerization” for English-language original research articles without date restrictions. Articles were included that either discussed the role of FC in treating AKs or compared various AK field therapies. The relevant articles were then distributed to a panel of nine dermatologists with significant expertise in managing AKs. Each panelist reviewed the articles and assigned them a level of evidence based on Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SORT) criteria. The panel then convened on to discuss the studies and develop consensus statements on the role of FC in selecting AK therapy. The panel utilized a modified Delphi process to approve the adoption of each statement and gave each one a strength of recommendation based on SORT criteria.
Results: The initial literature search produced 243 articles that met search criteria. After a thorough screening of these articles for relevance to the research question, 21 articles were chosen to be reviewed by the panel and assigned a level of evidence. Of the 21 articles that were reviewed, the panel assigned level 1 evidence to three articles, level 2 evidence to six articles, and level 3 evidence to twelve articles. The panel created seven consensus statements related to AK management and FC. All seven statements received a unanimous (9/9) vote for adoption. Each of the statements was given a strength of recommendation according to sort criteria
Conclusion: Field cancerization due to chronic ultraviolet exposure leads to subclinical AK lesions in addition to lesions that are clinically apparent. In order to address these lesions, field therapy is an important component of an adequate regimen and can be used in conjunction with lesion-directed therapy for optimal results.