| Literature DB >> 33403743 |
Samar Abdallah M Salem1, Tabarek Abdulkhaleq Fezeaa1, Nashwa El Khazragy2, Marwa Y Soltan1.
Abstract
Surgical methods are favorably used for treatment of stable vitiligo, and platelet-rich plasma (PRP) can be added to augment the effect. The additive value of PRP, however, remains elusive. Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) is released from activated platelets with a capacity for stimulating melanocyte proliferation and migration. The treatment outcomes for the mini-punch grafting (MPG)/phototherapy treatment with and without PRP were assessed and the relation between bFGF and the obtained results were evaluated. Thirty-four vitiliginous patches, two per each patient with stable vitiligo, were enrolled in this intrapatient-controlled study and treated with autologous MPG and subsequent exposure to phototherapy with and without enhancement via PRP procedure at the time of the procedure, and monthly for the subsequent 3 months. Re-pigmentation assessment via vitiligo scores as well as measurement of lesional bFGF were done. PRP assistance to MPG/phototherapy treatment resulted in earlier re-pigmentation at week 8. However, this enhancement effect vanished at the study end (week 20) as ideal re-pigmentation (>75% re-pigmentation) was encountered in 10 patches (58.8%) treated with MPG/phototherapy modality, and in 12 patches (70.6%) treated with PRP-assisted method without significant difference between them. Lesional bFGF increased after both treatments with a higher expression with PRP assistance but without clinical reflection on the final outcome. PRP can speed the re-pigmentation response for MPG/phototherapy procedure without any significant effect on the final outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Vitiligo; bFGF; mini-punch grafting; phototherapy; platelet-rich plasma
Year: 2021 PMID: 33403743 DOI: 10.1111/dth.14738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther ISSN: 1396-0296 Impact factor: 2.851