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Treatment options for vitiligo reviewed


 

AT CALDERM 2023

– According to Delphine J. Lee, MD, PhD, some patients report that their dermatologists tell them there are no effective treatments for vitiligo.

Dr. Delphine J. Lee, chief of dermatology and residency program director at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center

Dr. Delphine J. Lee

However, this is not supported by the ongoing level of research on vitiligo, with more than 100 randomized controlled trials published over the last 5 years, Dr. Lee, chief of dermatology at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, said at the annual symposium of the California Society of Dermatology & Dermatologic Surgery. And, in 2022, ruxolitinib cream became the first FDA-approved treatment for vitiligo. “There’s a lot of research happening now, and I’m pleased to say that despite the fact that some of these medications are not all brand new and exciting, they’re still new in that we have new evidence for them,” she said. “Of the 100 randomized, controlled trials, UV therapy remains a strong part of our armamentarium.”

Stabilizing disease

Dr. Lee underscored the importance of stabilizing existing vitiligo and arresting progressive disease, which may be indicated by four key signs: koebnerization; trichrome lesions; inflammation, which can appear as erythema, scaling, and pruritus; and confetti-like macules that are typically 1 mm to 5 mm in size. Key principles of vitiligo treatment are to stop immune destruction and to stimulate melanocyte differentiation, migration, and melanin production, which is “probably why phototherapy is so important and helpful,” she said.

Managing patients’ expectations is also important, added Dr. Lee, who shows patients photos from published clinical trials “so they can see what excellent repigmentation really means.”

Dexamethasone vs. mycophenolate

In a randomized, controlled trial published in 2021, researchers compared dexamethasone oral mini-pulse (OMP), 2.5 mg, on two successive days a week, with oral mycophenolate mofetil, 500 mg b.i.d., up to 2 g every day, for 180 days as a stabilizing treatment for patients with progressive, nonsegmental vitiligo, with 90 days of treatment-free follow-up. Assessments included the vitiligo disease activity (VIDA) score, the number of new lesions in the past 30 days, and the Vitiligo Area Scoring Index (VASI). Arrest of disease progression was defined as the absence of any new lesions in the previous 30 days.

Over the treatment and follow-up period, both groups showed a significant trend for reduction in VIDA and in the number of new lesions in the previous 30 days, compared with baseline (P < .001). The difference between VASI at baseline and VASI at 180 and at 270 days was not significant in both groups.

Adverse side effects reported with dexamethasone included acne, weight gain, headache, insomnia, and menstrual irregularity. “The misconception is that because we only give patients a tiny dose of steroids – 2.5 mg two days per week – that they aren’t going to have any side effects,” Dr. Lee commented. “But in fact, they do.” The most common side effects with mycophenolate were nausea and diarrhea. Two patients on mycophenolate discontinued treatment: one for leukopenia and one for transaminitis, but both conditions resolved after treatment was stopped.

The researchers concluded that both dexamethasone OMP and mycophenolate mofetil halt actively spreading vitiligo. “Relapse occurred earlier with mycophenolate, and the relapse rate was higher than with dexamethasone OMP, but this was not statistically significant,” said Dr. Lee, who also leads an immunology research team at The Lundquist Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center.

Other vitiligo treatment options she discussed included the following:

Betamethasone OMP and oral azathioprine. In a comparative study, researchers compared betamethasone OMP with oral azathioprine in arresting disease progression and inducing repigmentation in adults with vitiligo. Significantly more patients in the betamethasone OMP group achieved arrest of progression at 2 months than those in the azathioprine group, but at 6 months the difference was not significant. At 6 months, of the 19 patients who completed 6 months of betamethasone OMP, 2, 2, and 9 patients had more than 20%, 10%-20%, and 5%-10% repigmentation, respectively; and of the 18 patients who completed 6 months of azathioprine, 2 patients had 10%-20% repigmentation, with the remaining patients having no repigmentation or less than 5% repigmentation.

One patient in the azathioprine group developed acute pancreatitis but none developed transaminitis or leukopenia. “Azathioprine is another agent to add to our toolbox,” Dr. Lee said of the study findings. “Both betamethasone OMP and daily azathioprine are effective” in halting disease progression.

Low-dose cyclosporine. In a comparative study, 50 patients with active vitiligo were randomized into two groups: 25 to dexamethasone OMP 2.5 mg on two consecutive days/week for 4 months, and 25 to cyclosporine 3 mg/kg per day for 4 months, stopped treatment, and were then followed up for another 2 months. After 6 months, 84% of patients in the dexamethasone OMP group and 88% of patients in the cyclosporine group achieved arrest of disease progression (P = 1.00), but the mean time to achieve that endpoint was shorter for those in the cyclosporine group, compared with those in the dexamethasone OMP group (a mean of 3.92 weeks vs. 4.12 weeks, respectively; P = .01).

The list of adverse side effects for cyclosporine was “quite lengthy compared to the usual you would expect for dexamethasone,” said Dr. Lee, who was not involved with the study. “This is something we want to take seriously and discuss with our patients. Still, I would say that low-dose cyclosporine is another possibility to add to our toolbox.”

Phototherapy combined with polypodium leucotomos. Dr. Lee highlighted a randomized, controlled trial in which 21 patients with generalized vitiligo received narrow band (NB)-UVB phototherapy plus polypodium leucotomos extract (480 mg b.i.d.) and 21 patients received NB-UVB phototherapy plus placebo. After 6 months of treatment, patients in the NB-UVB plus oral polypodium leucotomos extract group had a better response rate, compared with those in the NB-UVB plus placebo group (47.8% vs. 22%). “We know from studies of polypodium leucotomos that it seems to have an impact on adaptive immunity as well as helps to decrease oxidative stress, so that may help with melanocyte stability in vitiligo,” said Dr. Lee, who was not affiliated with the study. “As with all treatments, the head and neck is very responsive to this combination treatment. The next most responsive area would be the trunk, followed by the extremities, and hands, and feet.”

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