Non-surgical treatment of post-burn hypopigmentation: a literature review.
Elise LuponYanis BerkaneNicolas BertheuilCurtis L CetruloCamille VaillantBenoît ChaputOlivier CamuzardAlexandre G LellouchPublished in: Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association (2024)
The treatment of post-burn hypopigmentation was primarily surgical before the advent of new technologies. Medical devices and therapies are emerging to manage scar sequelae that can be disfiguring and associated with severe psychosocial impact. These innovations have been poorly investigated for hypopigmentation, but they represent a real hope. We reviewed all articles published on Pubmed up to June 2022. Included studies had to specifically focus on treating post-burn hypopigmented scars. All articles evaluating transient solutions such as make-up, and articles describing inflammation-linked hypopigmentation with no etiological details or no burn injury history were excluded. Through this review, we have highlighted six different types of non-surgical treatments reported in post-burn leukoderma potentially allowing definitive results. Electrophoto-Biomodulation or E light (combining intensive pulsed light, radiofrequency, and cooling), topical daylight psoralen UVA therapy, and lasers (Fractional lasers using pulse energies or CO2FL devices, lasers-assisted drug delivery as local bimatoprost and tretinoin or pimecrolimus) have been explored with encouraging results in hypopigmented burns. Finally, other promising medical strategies include using FK506, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, to induce melanogenesis or using melanocyte-stimulating hormones with fractional laser-assisted drug deliveries, which are expected to emerge soon.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- drug delivery
- oxidative stress
- anti inflammatory
- stem cells
- mental health
- emergency department
- systematic review
- early onset
- cancer therapy
- atomic force microscopy
- high speed
- radiation therapy
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- high resolution
- platelet rich plasma
- replacement therapy