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      Dermatologie und Venerologie 

      Physikalische Therapie: Licht, Kälte, Wärme

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      Springer-Verlag

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          Photochemotherapy of psoriasis with oral methoxsalen and longwave ultraviolet light.

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            Treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma by extracorporeal photochemotherapy. Preliminary results.

            Systemically disseminated cutaneous T-cell lymphoma is generally resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. We tested a treatment involving the extracorporeal photoactivation of biologically inert methoxsalen (8-methoxypsoralen) by ultraviolet A energy to a form that covalently cross-links DNA. After oral administration of methoxsalen, a lymphocyte-enriched blood fraction was exposed to ultraviolet A (1 to 2 J per square centimeter) and then returned to the patient. The combination of ultraviolet A and methoxsalen caused an 88 +/- 5 percent loss of viability of target lymphocytes, whereas the drug alone was inactive. Twenty-seven of 37 patients with otherwise resistant cutaneous T-cell lymphoma responded to the treatment, with an average 64 percent decrease in cutaneous involvement after 22 +/- 10 weeks (mean +/- SD). The responding group included 8 of 10 patients with lymph-node involvement, 24 of 29 with exfoliative erythroderma, and 20 of 28 whose disease was resistant to standard chemotherapy. Side effects that often occur with standard chemotherapy, such as bone marrow suppression, gastrointestinal erosions, and hair loss, did not occur. Although the mechanism of the beneficial effect is uncertain, an immune reaction to the infused damaged cells may have restricted the activity of the abnormal T cells. This preliminary study suggests that extracorporeal photochemotherapy is a promising treatment for widespread cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.
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              Treatment of generalized vitiligo in children with narrow-band (TL-01) UVB radiation therapy.

              Only a few clinical trials have been performed on the treatment of generalized vitiligo in children. Recently, narrow-band UVB therapy has been reported to be an effective and safe therapeutic option in adult patients with vitiligo. We studied the efficacy and safety of UVB (311 nm) therapy in children with generalized vitiligo and evaluated the effect of the therapy on the quality of life in these children. In an open trial, 51 children (20 males, 31 females) with generalized vitiligo were treated twice weekly with narrow-band UVB radiation therapy for the maximum period of 1 year. The Children's Dermatology Life Quality Index (CDLQI) was used to evaluate the psychosocial impact of disease and treatment and was scored before and after therapy. The treatment resulted in more than 75% overall repigmentation in 53% of patients and in stabilization of the disease in 80%. Responsiveness to therapy was positively correlated with localization of the lesions and the patients' compliance. Adverse events were limited and transient. The better the repigmentation grade, the better the CDLQI scores had improved. Narrow-band UVB therapy is effective and safe in childhood vitiligo; it also may significantly improve the quality of life.
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                Book Chapter
                : 1481-1492
                10.1007/3-540-26624-0_106
                f0020b5f-e985-406f-b3ec-eb45507b77c7
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