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.