AI Article Synopsis

  • The fractional ablative CO2 laser is increasingly used for treating burn scars, but success rates are inconsistent across different studies.
  • A systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated available data, focusing on patients with burn scars treated with this laser and measured with the Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS).
  • Overall, the review included eight studies and found a 29% average improvement in VSS scores from 282 patients, indicating that while treatment varies, there is a positive trend worth exploring further.

Article Abstract

Fractional ablative CO2 laser is being used increasingly to treat burn scars; however, objective measures of outcome success vary widely. This systematic review and meta-analysis extracts and pools available data to assess the outcomes of patients with burn scars treated with fractional ablative CO2 laser. A search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the gray literature was performed. The review included studies that reported patients with a confirmed diagnosis of scarring as a result of a burn injury, who were treated with fractional ablative CO2 laser and whose progress was recorded using the Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS). Eight studies were included in the systematic review and meta-analysis. Treatment regimens varied amongst studies, as did patient outcomes. Pooled data revealed an average VSS improvement of 29% across 282 patients following fractional CO2 ablative laser treatment. Although the heterogeneity of treatment regimens across studies limits this systematic review's ability to provide specific treatment recommendations, the overall trend towards improvement of burns scars treated with fractional CO2 laser based on the VSS encourages further exploration of this modality as a therapeutic tool.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraa130DOI Listing

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