Literature DB >> 14699367

Clinical study of repigmentation patterns with different treatment modalities and their correlation with speed and stability of repigmentation in 352 vitiliginous patches.

Davinder Parsad1, Roma Pandhi, Sunil Dogra, Bhushan Kumar.   

Abstract

Because the etiopathogenesis of depigmentation in vitiligo is still obscure, the source of pigmentation in the repigmentating lesion and its stability is also not fully known. Several authors have shown on histopathology and electron microscopy predominantly a perifollicular spread of pigment. The aim of this study was to clinically assess the types of repigmentation patterns obtained with different treatment modalities and their correlation with speed and stability of repigmentation. A total of 125 patients with vitiligo on treatment with psoralens (topical and systemic psoralen-UVA [PUVA]), steroids (both topical and systemic), and topical calcipotriol, alone or in combination were enrolled. Representative lesions of vitiligo excluding mucosal sites were selected in each patient and photographed at baseline. Repigmentation was assessed and labeled as marginal, perifollicular, diffuse, or combined. The preselected patches were evaluated at 3 months to assess the speed of repigmentation. Retention of pigment (stability) was noted at 6 months, after the stoppage of active treatment. Of the 352 vitiligo patches selected, 194 (55%) showed predominant perifollicular repigmentation, of which a majority (127; 65.5%) were on systemic PUVA and 35 (18%) were on topical PUVA. Diffuse pigmentation was observed in 98 patches (27.8%) of which 66 (67.3%) were on topical steroids. Marginal repigmentation was seen in 15, of which the majority (80%) were on systemic PUVA and topical calcipotriol. Of the 28 total lesions showing marked repigmentation at 3 months, 22 lesions pigmented in a diffuse manner, 2 in a perifollicular pattern, and 4 showed a combined type of repigmentation. On follow-up, marginal repigmentation was the most stable (93.3%), followed by perifollicular (91.7%) and combined type (84.4%). Diffuse repigmentation was the least stable (78.5%). Psoralens predominantly exhibit a perifollicular pattern of repigmentation and steroids (topical/systemic), a diffuse type. The speed of repigmentation is much faster when initial repigmentation is of the diffuse type as compared with follicular repigmentation. The marginal and perifollicular repigmentation is more stable than the diffuse type of repigmentation.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14699367     DOI: 10.1016/s0190-9622(03)00786-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol        ISSN: 0190-9622            Impact factor:   11.527


  13 in total

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Review 2.  Trends in Regenerative Medicine: Repigmentation in Vitiligo Through Melanocyte Stem Cell Mobilization.

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Review 4.  Melanocyte stem cells as potential therapeutics in skin disorders.

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8.  Vitiligo and the melanocyte reservoir.

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9.  Possible mechanisms by which topical 5-Fluorouracil and dermabrasion could induce pigment spread in vitiligo skin: an experimental study.

Authors:  Y Gauthier; T Anbar; S Lepreux; M Cario-André; L Benzekri
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10.  Validation of the Vitiligo Noticeability Scale: a patient-reported outcome measure of vitiligo treatment success.

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