Photodynamic therapy (PDT) with topical application of 5-aminolaevulinic acid (ALA, 20% w/w) was used to treat superficial basal cell carcinoma (BCC, 16 patients), Morbus Bowen (one patient), basal cell naevus syndrome (BCNS, three patients), actinic keratosis (AK, two patients), chronic inflammation (CI, one patient), and metastasized BCC (one patient). The interval between ALA application and illumination was 3-6 h. The incident light dose was 50-100 J cm 2, mostly 75 J cm -2, at 633 nm wavelength. This was based on the fluorescence excitation spectrum, measured on the skin of human volunteers. In a few cases, 514.5 nm light was used. A complete response (CR) rate of 79% (median follow-up 13 months) was obtained with 42 BCC lesions._The treatment of five areas with AK, two areas with CI and one area with M. Bowen yielded three CR for AK and five partial remissions (PR). Photodynamic therapy of metastasized BCC, after either topical or oral ALA, was not successful. Treatment of BCNS was satisfactory with 100% CR in one patient (22 lesions), PR in a second patient (20 lesions), and good palliation in a third patient (>250 lesions). The treatment was well tolerated, although the illumination had to be interrupted occasionally due to pain. Healing usually occurred in 2 weeks. Cosmetic results were good to excellent. 5-Aminolaevulinic acid application over 16-19 h and repeated treatments made it possible to obtain CR of non-superficial lesions. The selective tumour fluorescence was then lost, however, due to fluorescence of normal skin, but the cosmetic outcome did not deteriorate. 5-Aminolaevulinic acid PDT may be a good alternative outpatient treatment, especially in elderly patients and for large treatment areas. The excellent cosmetic outcome warrants further study in younger patients. More work is necessary to establish optimal ALA-treatment schemes.
Locally advanced unresectable pancreatic cancer is sometimes encountered without manifest distant metastases. Twenty patients with histologically proven unresectable pancreatic cancer without distant metastases were treated with radiotherapy and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Radiotherapy consisted of 50 Gy external upper abdomen radiation in two courses, concomitant with intravenous 5-FU 375 mg/m2 given as a bolus injection 4-6h before radiation on the first 4 days of each treatment course. The treatment protocol was completed in 18 patients without complications. The median survival time was 10 months which compares favourably with a 3-5 months median survival time when treatment is withheld. Nine patients (45 per cent) were alive at 1 year, two patients at 2, 3 and 4 years. A second-look operation was performed in four patients 6, 11, 12 and 22 months after completion of radiotherapy. In two patients the tumour could be resected. It appears that treatment with radiotherapy and 5-FU may benefit patients with locally advanced unresectable pancreatic cancer.
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