| Literature DB >> 32949337 |
Laure Migayron1,2, Katia Boniface1, Julien Seneschal3,4.
Abstract
Vitiligo is a chronic inflammatory skin disease leading to the loss of epidermal melanocytes. To date, treatment options for vitiligo patients are limited, lack sustained efficacy, and are mainly based on off-label use of immunosuppressive agents, such as systemic or topical steroids or topical calcineurin inhibitors, in association with the use of ultraviolet light. However, recent insights into the understanding of the immune pathogenesis of the disease have led to the identification of several therapeutic targets and the development of targeted therapies that are now being tested in clinical trials. In this review, based on the physiopathology of the disease, we summarize emerging targets that could be developed for the treatment of vitiligo and discuss recent and ongoing developments of drugs for the management of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Cytokines; Disease progression; Emerging treatments; JAK; Maintenance therapy; Melanocyte; Regeneration; Resident memory; T cells; Vitiligo
Year: 2020 PMID: 32949337 PMCID: PMC7649199 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-020-00447-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1Emerging treatments in vitiligo. Development of vitiligo is associated with skin inflammation. Strategies targeting the innate and adaptive immune response will be important to control skin inflammation in vitiligo, to stabilize and prevent the progression of the disease. Therapies aiming to promote melanocyte regeneration will also be important to consider to induce regimentation. Lastly, a maintenance therapy will be of utmost importance to prevent the recurrence of the disease.
Ongoing clinical trials in Vitiligo
| Target | Drugs | Trial phase | Administration | Clinical trial reference | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-inflammatory treatments | |||||
| JAK 1/2 inhibitor | Ruxolitinib | 2 | Topical | NCT03099304 | Facial-VASI50 at week 24 1.5% twice daily (15 [45%] of 33) and 1·5% once daily (15 [50%] of 30) |
| JAK 1/2 inhibitor | Ruxolitinib | 3 | Topical | NCT04052425 (TRuE-V1) and NCT04057573 (TruE-V2 | Ongoing |
| JAK/SYK inhibitor | Cerdulatinib | 2 | Topical | NCTO4103060 | Ongoing |
| JAK1/TYK2 inhibitor | PF-06651600 PF-06700841 | 2 | Systemic | NCT03715829 | Ongoing |
| JAK3 inhibitor | ATI-50002 | 2 | Topical | NCT03468855 | Ongoing |
| Anti-IL-15 | AMG 714 | 2 | Systemic | NCT04338581 | Ongoing |
| Anti-IL-17 | Secukinumab | Pilot trial | Systemic | EudraCT number: 2015–003552–48 | No significant improvement |
| PDE4 inhibitor | Apremilast + NB-UVB | 2 | Systemic | NCT03123016 | No significant improvement |
| PDE4 inhibitor | Apremilast + NB-UVB | 2 | Systemic | NCT03036995 | No significant improvement |
| HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor | Simvastatin | 2 | Systemic | NCT01517893 | No significant improvement |
| HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor | Atorvastatin + NB-UVB | 2 | Systemic | NCT02432534 | No significant improvement |
| Folic acid metabolism inhibitor | Methotrexate + NB-UVB | 2 | Systemic | NCT04237103 | Ongoing |
| Regenerative treatments | |||||
| Antioxidant | Gastroprotected superoxide dismutase: glisodin + NB-UVB | 2 | Systemic | NCT03941808 | Ongoing |
| Mc1R agonist | Afamelanotide + NB-UVB | 2 | Subcutaneous implant | NCT01430195 | VASI score: at week 24: Combination therapy group, repigmentation: 48.64% (95% CI 39.49–57.80%) NB-UVB: 33.26% (95% CI 24.18–42.33%) |
| Maintenance treatments | |||||
| Calcineurin inhibitor | Tacrolimus | 2 | Topical | NCT01841008 | Depigmentation of lesions Placebo group : 48.2% Tacrolimus group: 10.4% |
HMG-CoA β-Hydroxy β-methylglutaryl-CoA , IL interleukin, JAK Janus kinase, McIR Melanocortin 1 receptor, NB-UVB narrow band ultraviolet B, PDE4 phosphodiesterase-4, SYK spleen tyrosine kinase, TYK2 tyrosine kinase 2, VASI vitiligo area scoring index
| A better understanding of the immune pathogenesis of vitiligo has led to the identification and development of targeted therapies. |
| Targeting innate immune pathways through the inhibition of danger signals, such as HSP70, represents an interesting approach for the treatment of vitiligo. |
| Resident memory T cells are involved in the recurrence of vitiligo and could be targeted by blocking interleukin-15. |
| Trials involving JAK inhibitors, which inhibit the effects of several pro-inflammatory cytokines, have shown promising results in vitiligo. |
| Promoting the regeneration of melanocytes and preventing their loss will still be an important step to consider in treating vitiligo. |