Photodiagnosis and photodynamic therapy | 2021

Modulation of skin microbiome in acne patients by aminolevulinic acid-photodynamic therapy.

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nAminolevulinic acid-photodynamic therapy (ALA-PDT) has been an effective treatment for moderate to severe acne. However, effect of ALA-PDT on skin microbiome in acne is limitedly known.\n\n\nAIM\nTo examine the composition, diversity, and resilience of skin microbiome in acne patients before and after ALA-PDT.\n\n\nMETHOD\nA prospective study was conducted on five patients with moderate to severe acne. All patients underwent a 5% ALA-PDT at a two-week interval for four sessions. Epidermal and follicular samples of acne patients were acquired for 16S rRNA gene amplicon metasequencing at baseline and before the final session.\n\n\nRESULT\nALA-PDT inhibited Cutibacterium acnes of follicular microbiome in acne. Follicular residential bacteria, mainly Bacillus and Lactococcus, rose in abundance after PDT. ALA-PDT increased the diversity of skin microbiome in acne and clustered follicular microbiome toward epidermal microbiome, both taxonomically and functionally.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nALA-PDT exerts its therapeutic effect on acne partially through inhibiting C. acnes and modulating the composition and potential function of skin microbiome in acne.

Volume None
Pages \n 102556\n
DOI 10.1016/j.pdpdt.2021.102556
Language English
Journal Photodiagnosis and photodynamic therapy

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