Discussing treatment expectations with patients is key because it can take up to 1 year to see a significant response with topical immunosuppressants and narrowband ultraviolet B treatment. The head and neck areas are often the first sites to repigment, she said, followed by the extremities or the trunk. “The hands and feet are generally last; they are usually the most stubborn areas,” Dr. Shiu said. “Even when you do see repigmentation, it usually happens on the dorsal surfaces. The tips of the fingers and toes are difficult to repigment. Luckily, the face is one of the top responders, so that helps a lot.”
While some treatment efforts result in “complete and beautiful” repigmentation, she added, many yield uneven and incomplete results. “We don’t understand why repigmentation occurs in some areas but not in others,” she said. “We don’t have any biomarkers for treatment response. That is something we are looking into.”
For a patient with rapidly progressing active disease, consider an oral steroid mini-pulse 2 consecutive days per week for a maximum of 3-6 months. “I usually recommend that patients do this on Saturday and Sunday,” Dr. Shiu said. “Studies have shown this strategy can halt progression in 85%-91% of cases if patients are on it for at least 3 months.”
Relapse after successful repigmentation occurs in about 40% of cases following discontinuation of treatment, so she recommends biweekly application of 0.1% tacrolimus ointment as maintenance therapy. “Studies have shown this is enough to decrease the relapse rate to around 9%,” she said.
Tissue, Cellular Grafts
Surgical repigmentation strategies rely on transplanting normal skin to areas affected by vitiligo. In general, more than 50% of patients achieve more than 80% repigmentation. Options are divided into tissue grafts vs cellular grafts. “The old methods are tissue grafting such as punch grafting, tissue blister grafting, and spit thickness grafting, which can treat limited areas of skin,” Dr. Shiu said. Newer approaches include cellular grafting using the melanocyte-keratinocyte transplantation procedure, which can treat larger areas of skin.
The main drawback of this approach is that it is expensive and there is no insurance code for it, “but I hope that this becomes an option for our patients in the future because data indicate that repigmentation is maintained for up to 72 months after treatment,” she said.
In June 2023, an autologous cell harvesting device known as RECELL received FDA approval for repigmentation of stable vitiligo lesions. According to a press release from the manufacturer, AVITA Medical, a clinician “prepares and delivers autologous skin cells from pigmented skin to stable depigmented areas, offering a safe and effective treatment for vitiligo.”
Dr. Shiu disclosed that she received research support from AbbVie.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.