Forum for Nordic Dermato-Venereology Nr1,2019 | Page 19
Dissertation
Epidemiology, Diagnostics and Treatment of Non-melanoma Skin Cancers
O scar Z aar , MD
Department of Dermatology and Venereology Institute of Clinical Sciences Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg,
Göteborg, Sweden. E-mail: [email protected]
Oscar Zaar, defended his doctoral thesis on March 22, 2018 at the Department of Dermatology and Venereology
Institute of Clinical Sciences Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg. Opponent was Gregor Jemec,
Department of Dermatology, Roskilde Hospital, Health Science Faculty, University of Copenhagen, Roskilde,
Denmark and Supervisor was John Paoli, Department of Dermatology and Venereology Institute of Clinical
Sciences, Gothenburg, Sweden. The thesis is available at: https://gupea.ub.gu.se/handle/2077/54538.
S
kin cancer, including malignant melanoma and non-mel-
anoma skin cancer (NMSC), is a growing problem due to
the increasing incidence in Sweden and in other Caucasian
populations. NMSCs are diagnosed as often as all other cancers
combined and include basal cell carcinoma (BCC), squamous
cell carcinoma (SCC), precursors to SCC such as Bowen’s dis-
ease (BD) and actinic keratosis (AK), as well as several rare skin
cancers including Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC). The purpose
of this thesis was to investigate novel aspects within the fields
of epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment of NMSCs.
In study I, the incidence and clinical characteristics of Swedish
patients with MCC was explored. During the study period
from 1993 to 2012, the age standardised incidence of MCC
almost doubled with an increase of 73–85% depending on the
population used for age standardisation. The overall incidence
for women and men per 100,000 persons, using the world
population for age standardisation, rose from 0.11 to 0.19
between 1993 and 2012.
In study II, the effectiveness of photodynamic therapy (PDT)
for the treatment of BD was evaluated retrospectively for 423
lesions in 335 patients. The study showed that PDT was a
relatively effective treatment with a complete clearance rate
of 63.4% after a median follow-up time of 11.2 months. BD
lesions > 20 mm in size and a single session of PDT were factors
associated with statistically worse outcome.
Fig. 1. Gregor Jemec (Opponent), Oscar Zaar and John Paoli (Supervisor).
In study IV, the chemical composition of lipids in BCCs was
mapped using Time-of-Flight-Secondary-Ion-Mass-Spectro
metry (ToF-SIMS). ToF-SIMS was able to identify different lipids
in healthy and cancerous tissue. Furthermore, sphingomyelin
lipids were found in aggressive BCCs whereas phosphatidyl-
choline lipids were observed in less aggressive tumours.
In conclusion, the incidence of MCC has increased the last 20
years, PDT is a relatively effective treatment modality in BD,
novel illumination protocols with lower light intensity can
decrease pain in PDT and ToF-SIMS can be used to identify
the lipid composition of BCCs.
L ist
In study III, a novel irradiation protocol in PDT for multiple
AKs using a stepwise increase of light intensity, staying below
50 mW/cm 2 during the whole treatment session, was compared
to the conventional irradiation protocol to assess pain levels
during treatment and effectiveness. Both protocols had the
same total light dose of 37 J/cm 2 . The novel treatment proto-
col led to a small but statically significant decrease in pain (D
1.1 points on a visual analogue scale, p < 0.01). However, the
clearance rate with the new protocol was slightly but signif-
icantly lower than that of the conventional protocol (91.2%
vs. 93.7%, respectively) (p = 0.04).
Forum for Nord Derm Ven 2019, Vol. 24, No. 1
of original publications
1. Zaar O, Gillstedt M, Lindelöf B, Wennberg-Larkö AM, Paoli J.
Merkel cell carcinoma incidence is increasing in Sweden. J Eur
Acad Dermatol Venereol 2016; 30: 1708–1713.
2. Zaar O, Fougelberg J, Hermansson A, Gillstedt M, Wennberg A-M,
Paoli J. Effectiveness of photodynamic therapy in Bowen’s disease:
a retrospective observational study in 423 lesions. J Eur Acad Der-
matol Venereol 2017; 31: 1289–1294.
3. Zaar O, Sjöholm Hylén A, Gillstedt M, Paoli J. A prospective, ran-
domised, within-subject study of ALA-PDT for actinic keratoses
using different irradiation regimes. Submitted for peer review.
4. Munem M, Zaar O, Dimovska Nilsson K, Neittaanmäki N, Paoli J,
Fletcher JS. Chemical imaging of aggressive basal cell carcinoma
using time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Biointer-
phases. 2018; 13: 03B402. E-publication ahead of print.
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