Treatment For Melasma Paper
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Plastic Surgery International
Volume 2011, Article ID 158241, 7 pages
doi:10.1155/2011/158241
Clinical Study
Skin Needling to Enhance Depigmenting Serum Penetration in
the Treatment ofMelasma
G. Fabbrocini,1 V. De Vita,1 N. Fardella,1 F. Pastore,1 M. C. Annunziata,1 M. C.Mauriello,1
A.Monfrecola,1 and N. Cameli2
1 Section of Dermatology, Department of Systematic Pathology, University of Naples Federico, Street Sergio Pansini 5,
80133 Napoli, Italy
2 San Gallicano Dermatological Institute, Street Elio Chianesi 53, 00144 Rome, Italy
Correspondence should be addressed to G. Fabbrocini, prenotazionebiennale@yahoo.it
Received 15 November 2010; Revised 20 January 2011; Accepted 15 February 2011
Academic Editor: Bishara S. Atiyeh
Copyright © 2011 G. Fabbrocini et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License,
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Melasma is a common hypermelanotic disorder affecting the facial area which has a considerable psychological impact on the
patient. Managing melasma is a difficult challenge that requires long-term treatment with a number of topical agents, such as
rucinol and sophora-alpha. Aims.We aim to compare the combined treatment of skin needling and depigmenting serumwith that
using depigmenting serum alone in the treatment of melasma, in order to evaluate the use of microneedles as a means to enhance
the drug’s transdermal penetration. Methods. Twenty patients were treated with combined skin needling and depigmenting serum
on one side of the face and with depigmenting serum alone on the other side. The outcome was evaluated periodically for up to
two months using theMelasma Area Severity Index score and the Spectrocolorimeter X-Rite 968. Results. The side with combined
treatment (skin needling + depigmenting serum) presented a statistically significant reduction in MASI score and luminosity
index (L) levels compared to the side treated with depigmenting serum alone, and clinical symptoms were significantly improved.
Conclusions. Our study suggests the potential use of combining skin needling with rucinol and sophora-alpha compounds to
achieve better results in melasma treatment compared to rucinol and sophora-alpha alone.
1. Introduction
Melasma is an extremely common disorder in women
between 20 and 45 years of age which involves alterations
in normal skin pigmentation, resulting from the hyperactivity
of epidermal melanocytes. It is exacerbated by
sun exposure, pregnancy, oral contraceptives, and certain
antiepilepsy drugs. The women most likely to develop
melasma are those of fertile age with intermediate skin
phototypes. Three histological pigmentation patterns have
been identified: epidermal, in which the pigment is deposited
in the basal or suprabasal layer; dermal, with melanin-laden
macrophages in the superficial and middermis; and mixed,
which is characterized by features of both the epidermal,
and the dermal patterns. Hypermelanosis may be epidermal
(brown), dermal (blue-gray), or mixed (brown-gray).
Wood’s lamp examination distinguishes epidermal from
dermal hyperpigmentation in all skin phototypes except for
V and VI, in which it is of no use. In skin phototypes I–
IV, epidermal melasma is accentuated but dermal melasma
is not. Clinically, the condition is characterized by irregularly
shaped, asymptomatic spots ranging in color from beige to
brown, which usually occur in the most photo-exposed areas:
the upper lip, the cheeks, the cheekbones and the forehead.
Its pathogenesis is not yet fully understood, but there is an
association with genetic and hormonal factors, use of drugs
and cosmetics, endocrinopathies, and sun exposure [1, 2].
The management of melasma is a challenge. Conventional
melasma treatment includes elimination of any
possible pathogenetic factors and the use of a sunscreen
and hypopigmenting agent, often in combination with other
therapies, such as tretinoin, topical corticosteroids, or superficial
peeling agents. These treatments do not necessarily
cure the cause of melasma, and the effectiveness of each
will vary from patient to patient. Even after treatment,
skin discoloration may not always disappear completely, and
2 Plastic Surgery International
each patient may have to try various treatment options to
achieve a satisfactory result. Some treatments may have to be
performed continually in order to maintain results, such as
regular application of a skin lightening agent combined with
an effective use of sunscreen and avoidance of sun exposure.
Several lightening agents are available today, but hydroquinone,
retinoic acid, and azelaic acid are the ones most
frequently used. Combination therapies, for example, with
hydroquinone, tretinoin, and corticosteroids, have also been
used in the treatment of melasma and are thought to
have greater efficacy than single therapies. Other investigations
have been carried out on depigmenting agents’
ability to block hypopigmentation or inhibit melanin synthesis
through mechanisms involving tyrosinase synthesis
inhibitors, tyrosinase activity inhibitors, cytotoxic agents for
melanocytes, inhibitors of the transfer of melanosomes to
keratinocytes, and so forth. New depigmenting products
currently being used in cosmetics are rucinol and sophoraalpha.
Rucinol inhibits the catalytic activity of tyrosinase
and is also able to act on TRP-1 (tyrosinase-related protein
1) [3]; sophora-alpha, another lightening agent, acts on the
outside of the melanocyte by blocking the extracellular action
of alpha-MSH [4–6] (responsible for activating the melanin
synthesis pathway by blocking MSH receptors).
Er:YAG laser resurfacing, dermabrasion, and combined
ultra-pulse CO2 laser with Q-switched alexandrite laser have
been reported to show benefits for refractory melasma.
However, these methods are more invasive, and posttreatment
wound care is necessary. In addition, prolonged
erythema, hyperpigmentation, hypopigmentation, infection,
and hypertrophic scarring are potential side effects. Consequently,
despite these measures, treatment of this recalcitrant
disorder is often difficult and frustrating for the patient and
the clinician.
In order to achieve better results in the treatment of
melasma, in the last few years it has been proposed that
the topical application of skin lightening agents should
be combined with procedures to enhance the drugs’ skin
penetration, such as electroporation [7, 8], sonophoresis
[9, 10], and iontophoresis [11, 12]. Recently, skin needling
has been described as a new technique able to increase
transdermal drug absorption [13–20].
The purpose of our study is to compare combined
skin needling and depigmenting serum (containing two
principal topical agents: rucinol and sophora-alpha) with
depigmenting serum alone in the treatment of melasma
in order evaluate the use of skin needling as a means to
enhance the transdermal penetration of a serum containing
rucinol and sophora-alpha in managing abnormal skin
hyperpigmentation.
2.Materials andMethods
2.1. Patients. Twenty female patients affected with melasma,
involving both hemifaces, were recruited between September
2009 and October 2009. The patients were 32–60 years old
(the average age was 53) and had Fitzpatrick skin types
III–V, as shown in detail in Table 1. All patients signed
Table 1
No. of patients (%)
Age (years)
32–40 2 (10)
41–50 8 (40)
51–60 10 (50)
Fitzpatrick skin type
III 6 (30)
IV 9 (45)
V 5 (25)
the informed consent. The ethical committee approved the
study (R.S. 36/09). Inclusion criteria were as follows: age
between 32 and 60 years, bilateral and symmetrical idiopathic
melasma, voluntary participation, ability to comprehend
and provide informed consent, resistance to previous
common therapies, preceding therapies discontinued at least
12 months before the start of the study, agreement not
to use other therapies during the study. Exclusion criteria
were as follows: history of keloid scarring, diabetes, bleeding
disorder, collagen vascular disease, corticosteroid therapy,
anticoagulant therapy, retionoid therapy, hormone therapy,
presence of skin cancers, warts, solar keratoses, or any skin
infection, current participation in another clinical study, any
depigmenting treatment within the past 12 months, and lack
of cooperation. Female volunteers were excluded if they were
pregnant.
2.2. Procedure. During the first session (T0), each patient
underwent a careful dermatologic examination: an experienced
dermatologist clinically evaluated melasma areas on
both hemifaces by using a Wood’s lamp and the validated
scoring method Melasma Area and Severity Index (MASI)
[21]. The face of each patient was divided into four areas:
forehead, right malar region, left malar region, and chin,
corresponding to 30%, 30%, 30%, and 10% of the total face,
respectively. The severity of the melasma in each of these
four regions was assessed on the basis of three variables:
percentage of the total area involved (A), darkness (D), and
homogeneity (H). A numerical value was assigned for the
corresponding percentage area involved: 0: no involvement;
1: <10% involvement; 2: 10–29% involvement; 3: 30–49%
involvement; 4: 50–69% involvement; 5: 70–89% involvement;
6: 90–100% involvement. The darkness of the melasma
(D) compared to normal skin and the homogeneity of the
hyperpigmentation (H) were rated on a scale of 0 to 4 (0:
normal skin color with no evidence of hyperpigmentation;
1: barely visible hyperpigmentation/specks of involvement; 2:
mild hyperpigmentation/small patchy areas of involvement
<1.5 cm diameter; 3: moderate hyperpigmentation/patches
of involvement >2 cm diameter; 4: severe hyperpigmentation/
uniform skin involvement without any clear areas). To
calculate the MASI score, the sum of the severity grade
for darkness (D) and homogeneity (H) was multiplied by
the numerical value of the areas (A) involved and by the
percentages of the four facial areas (10–30%). These values
Plastic Surgery International 3
Figure 1: Digital standard photograph of a 44-year-old patient
affected with melasma.
Figure 2: Digital UV photograph of a 44-year-old patient affected
with melasma.
were summated to obtain the total MASI score: forehead 0.3
(D+H)A + right malar 0.3 (D+H)A + left malar 0.3 (D+H)A
+ Chin 0.1 (D+H)A.
In order to carry out a comparative analysis, digital
photographs were collected for each patient and gathered
in a database: two right hemi-face and two left hemiface
photographs were captured by using both standard
light and UV light; ultraviolet reflectance photography is
a valuable tool to accentuate pigmentation (Figures 1 and
2), but patients must wash and degrease the face before
photography to prevent reflection from the skin surface,
which obscures pigmentation assessment. A colorimetric
evaluation of melasma areas (right hemi-face, left hemi-face)
was performed using X-Rite (Figure 3; Spectrocolorimeter
X-rite 968). Colorimetric evaluation can objectively detect
changes in the degree of skin pigmentation as the colorimeter
records color in a designated three-dimensional space: L∗,
a∗, b∗. The first value, luminance (L∗), expresses the
brightness of the variations in color from total black to total
white. The value a∗ is a tone of color ranging from red
(+) to green (−). When the rash appears on the skin, the
value becomes positive. The third value represented by b∗
is a tone of colour ranging from blue (−) to yellow (+). If
hyperpigmentation appears, the value becomes positive.
Figure 3: Spectrocolorimeter X-rite 968.
Figure 4: Dermaroller CIT 8: professional device.
The first treatment, performed by a different dermatologist,
was preceded by the disinfection and the application
of a topical anaesthetic for 60 minutes on melasma right
hemifacial areas. A topical anaesthetic was also applied on
melasma left hemi-facial areas for the same time period, so
as not to introduce bias, as the PH of the topical anaesthetic
should act as a factor against or favouring the penetration of
the depigmenting agents used. This was carried out by rolling
a special device over melasma areas, (Figure 4; Dermaroller-
Model CIT 8) which consists of a 12 cm plastic handle
attached to a cylinder, like a small paintroller, 20mm in
diameter and 20mm in length. The surface of the cylinder
houses 24 circular arrays of 8 needles each (total 192 needles),
with a needle length of 0.5mm and a diameter of 0.02 mm.
Needles and disks are firmly bound together with a special
medically approved adhesive. The tool was rolled in different
directions: horizontally, vertically and diagonally, and right
and left. This ensured an even pricking pattern, resulting
in about 250–300 pricks/cm2. As expected, the skin bled
for a short time after treatment. When bleeding stopped,
a serous ooze formed and was removed from the surface
of the skin using sterile saline solution. After rolling, the
depigmenting serumwas applied on the treated areas. On the
melasma left hemi-facial areas, depigmenting serum alone
4 Plastic Surgery International
Figure 5: Dermaroller C8: home device.
was applied. This treatment was repeated twice with a onemonth
interval.
In order to achieve better results, at the end of the first
treatment, each patient was informed how to use the home
roller device (Dermaroller-Model C8; Figure 5) and apply
a depigmenting serum on melasma right hemi-facial areas.
Model C8 consists of 196 needles arranged in 8 rows whose
length is only 0.13±0.02 mm, with the result that they blunt
later than those in the device for medical use only so that
the C8 model can be used at least 15 times without losing
its skin penetration capacity. Use of C8 does not require
local anaesthesia and does not cause bleeding. Patients
performed this treatment every day for two months, rolling
the home device horizontally, vertically and diagonally, and
right and left, 8 times in each direction and immediately
after applying a standardized amount of the depigmenting
serum. The authors could approximately assess the patients’
appropriate use of the device and the serum during this time
by evaluating the time needed to blunt the microneedles and
finish the serum. Furthermore, we recommended application
of a total sunscreen on both hemi-faces.
Each patient was examined one month after the first
treatment: the same experienced dermatologist evaluated
each patient’s melasma areas on both hemi-faces, scoring
them using the same scale as previously reported, to assess
any clinical improvement in the severity of the lesions.
Digital photographs and colorimetric evaluation of melasma
areas were also collected and gathered in the database. The
last followup visit was conducted in a similar manner two
months after the first treatment. At this point, the patients’
MASI score, digital photographs and colorimetric data were
compared with the relative data collected during the first
treatment.
3. Results
All patient completed the study. The results achieved after
two sessions of treatment were assessed. After each treatment
Figure 6: UV digital photograph of 42-year-old woman at baseline.
Figure 7: UV digital photograph of a 42-year-old woman treated
by using skin needling with depigmenting serum (two months after
the baseline).
session, the facial skin treated using skin needling in
combination with depigmenting serum appeared reddened
and swollen, but patients stated that the redness and swelling
disappeared in two to three days. No sideeffect was reported
or found. All patients returned to work or normal activity
immediately, and no patient needed to take time off work.
The photographic comparison highlighted that, in the
areas treated with skin needling in combination with
depigmenting serum, hyperpigmentation was significantly
reduced compared to areas treated using depigmenting
serum alone (Figures 6, 7, 8, and 9). On the right hemifaces
treated using the protocol therapy skin needling +
depigmenting serum, the baseline mean MASI score of 19.1
decreased to 14.4 (P < .001) one month postoperatively
and to 9.2 (P < .001) two months post operatively. On the
left hemi-faces treated using depigmenting serum alone, the
baseline mean MASI score of 20.4 decreased to 17.4 (P < .05)
one month post operatively and to 13.3 two months post
operatively (P < .05).
Plastic Surgery International 5
Table 2
Depigmenting Serum + Skin needling Depigmenting serum alone
Pz. L∗ before treatment L∗ after treatment L∗ before treatment L∗ after treatment
1 51.70 59.89 54.80 59.94
2 55.82 65.49 55.36 60.88
3 58.45 68.22 56.77 64.89
4 54.27 64.17 56.67 63.74
5 48.85 59.63 53.15 59.55
6 59.78 70.92 61.18 62.18
7 55.09 66.30 53.92 60.97
8 52.10 63.70 51.20 57.66
9 56.73 69.27 58.18 65.52
10 56.34 67.18 59.48 65.02
11 51.45 62.02 54.54 60.55
12 60.15 70.38 59.76 66.61
13 52.60 63.70 54.39 60.03
14 56.25 64.22 56.10 59.00
15 55.91 66.10 56.83 62.03
16 50.26 65.35 55.92 59.62
17 52.73 59.73 52.13 60.79
18 50.35 64.71 51.17 59.22
19 52.72 62.71 54.73 62.14
20 55.31 65.73 52.04 61.98
Average 54.34 64.97 55.42 61.61
D STD 3.2665 3.1710 2.8177 2.425
Figure 8: UV digital photograph of 42-year old woman at baseline.
These results were confirmed by a statistically significant
increase in the average luminance value (L∗) in patients
treated with skin needling and depigmenting serum (64.97)
versus patients treated with depigmenting serum alone
(61.61; paired Student’s t-test; P < .05). Comparing luminance
values (L∗) before and after treatment, improvement
translates into an increase in brightness of 17.4% in patients
treated with skin needling and depigmenting serum; patients
treated with depigmenting serum alone showed an increase
in brightness of 11.2%, but it was less evident than the
increase in brightness of the side treated with skin needling
+ depigmenting serum.
Figure 9: UV digital photograph of a 42-year-old woman treated by
using depigmenting serum alone (two months after the baseline).
These results, shown in detail in Table 2, suggest that
the use of skin needling improves the absorption of depigmenting
serum and offers an important contribution in the
treatment of melasma, which often constitutes a difficult
challenge for dermatologists.
6 Plastic Surgery International
4. Discussion
Despite the existence of several depigmenting agents, the
treatment of melasma is long and complicated, mainly
because it is difficult for these substances to penetrate the
skin. Indeed, the stratum corneum (SC), the outermost layer
of the skin, is the main obstacle to the drugs’ percutaneous
absorption because its barrier function significantly restricts
the drugs’ transdermal delivery [22, 23]. It ranges from 10
to 20 μm in thickness and consists of highly differentiated
keratinocytes (corneocytes) embedded in an intercellular
lipid matrix of mainly fatty acids, ceramides, cholesterol, and
cholesterol sulfate. To penetrate into the skin, drug molecules
must be small in size and/or lowmolecular weight. Lipophilic
molecules can penetrate the skin deeper than hydrophilic
ones. In the last few years, the transdermal delivery of active
substances has become an important therapy used in treating
a large number of skin diseases.
Skin penetration enhancement can be achieved either
physically or chemically [24–27].Many techniques have been
developed to improve transdermal drug delivery, such as
electroporation [7, 8], sonophoresis [9, 10], and iontophoresis
[11, 12], which are able to improve the stratum corneum
layer permeability and to enhance penetration of topical
agents through the skin.
Recently, the use of skin needling has been proposed
as a new physical strategy to increase transdermal drug
delivery. Since, 1995 this technique has been used to achieve
percutaneous collagen induction in order to reduce skin
imperfections [28, 29]. To date, skin needling has mostly
been proposed as an effective method of treating scars
and wrinkles [30, 31], and it is carried out by rolling a
special device over the skin comprising a rolling barrel fitted
with a variable number of microneedles. The micro-needles
penetrate through the epidermis but do not remove it; the
epidermis is only punctured and heals rapidly. The needles
seem to separate the cells from one another rather than cut
through them, and thus many cells are spared. Because the
needles are set in a roller, every needle initially penetrates at
an angle and then goes deeper as the roller turns. Finally, the
needle is extracted at a converse angle, therefore curving the
tracts and reflecting the path of the needle as it rolls into and
then out of the skin for about 0.5mm into the dermis. The
epidermis, and particularly the stratum corneum, remains
intact except for the minute holes, which are about four cells
in diameter [32]. In 1998, Henry et al., in the first study on
microneedle use for transdermal drug delivery, showed an
increase in magnitude of four levels in the permeability of
human skin after the insertion of an array of 150 μm long,
solid silicon, out-of-plane microneedles [33]. More recently,
several authors have shown that microneedle-injected sites
have a significantly higher transdermal penetration [13–
20]. Recent reports have tried to identify the mechanisms
involved in the enhancement of transdermal drug delivery
and several hypotheses have been proposed, though none is
completely exhaustive.
To understand the mechanism by which microneedles
increase skin permeability, McAllister et al. theoretically
modeled transdermal transport as diffusion through holes
of known geometry made by insertion of microneedles. All
the scientific data is based on a repetitive rolling (10 to 15
times) on the same area of the skin. In this case around 240
microinfiltration pores per square centimeter are set and all
of these pores close within minutes [32].
It may be that the microneedles aid in bypassing the
stratum corneum and enhancing drug delivery through the
skin by increasing skin blood perfusion also. A Laser Doppler
Perfusion Monitor was used to record maximum blood flow
and the time needed to reach maximum blood flow in the
treatment areas. Sections treated with microneedles showed
a higher maximum blood flow and reached maximum blood
flow faster than sites not treated with microneedles [19].
5. Conclusions
This pilot study describes the first report of improvement in
melasma through the use of skin needling in combination
with a depigmenting serum, and shows that combination
therapy with skin needling and topical depigmenting serum
is more effective than topical depigmenting serum alone in
improving melasma. As this was a pilot study, we have neither
a large sample size nor a long-term followup; a larger sample
and longer followups are needed to assess the long-term
efficacy of our results. Potential refinement of the number of
sessions and treatment parameters call for further evaluation
in order to maximize the therapeutic efficacy of this new
way of treating melasma, but it opens new perspectives for
employment of this device to enhance the penetration of
depigmenting compounds and to reduce treatment times.
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