Field Therapy for Actinic Keratosis: A Structured Review of the Literature on Efficacy, Cost, and Adherence.

Dermatol Surg

Department of Dermatology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • There are challenges in selecting cost-effective treatments for actinic keratosis due to limited studies comparing their cost, efficacy, and patient adherence.
  • A review of existing literature indicates that while topical therapies and in-office treatments like photodynamic therapy show similar effective costs, adherence to treatment significantly impacts their real-world effectiveness.
  • To improve comparison across treatments, future studies need to standardize efficacy measurements for better assessment of therapies for actinic keratosis.

Article Abstract

Background: Although there are evidence-based guidelines for actinic keratosis management, selecting a cost-effective field therapy is challenging because of limited studies comparing cost, efficacy, and adherence among treatments.

Objective: To review the literature on field-directed therapies for actinic keratosis, comparing efficacy, cost, and adherence data for topical and in-office treatments.

Materials And Methods: PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases were searched from October 2020 to March 2021 for articles on field therapy for actinic keratosis. Total cost per regimen was estimated using wholesale acquisition cost package prices and Medicare coverage rates for May 2021. Effective cost was approximated by dividing total cost by complete response rate.

Results: Efficacy data for various field therapies range widely, and long-term follow-up is limited. Cross-study comparisons are challenging because of heterogeneity of studies. Field-directed therapy with topical 5-fluorouracil and photodynamic therapy have similar effective cost. Adherence may significantly affect real-world efficacy and long-term clearance; this would favor shorter duration topical regimens or in-office procedures.

Conclusion: Standardization of future studies examining efficacy of field treatments for actinic keratosis will allow comparison across treatments. In-office treatments such as photodynamic therapy represent a cost-effective alternative to topical therapies with comparable efficacy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/DSS.0000000000003677DOI Listing

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