Table 1.
AUTHOR | YEAR | INTERVENTION | PATIENTS (N) | TREATMENT PERIOD (MONTHS) | PRIMARY OUTCOMES | ADVERSE EFFECTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Topical therapies | ||||||
Ho et al | 2011 | Tacrolimus vs. clobetasol vs. placebo | 100 | 6 | Successful response defined as repigmentation >50%; tacrolimus was successful in 58% of patients (n=55) with facial vitiligo and 23% (n=45) with non-facial vitiligo; clobetasol yielded comparable results | None reported |
Kose et al | 2010 | Mometasone vs. pimecrolimus | 40 | 3 | 65% repigmentation rate with mometasone, 42% repigmentation rate with pimecrolimus | Mometasone: atrophy, telangiectasia, and/or erythema (10%); pimecrolimus: burning sensation and/or pruritis (10%) |
Systemic therapies | ||||||
Singh et al | 2015 | Methotrexate vs. oral minipulse dexamethasone | 52 | 6 | 6 of 25 patients in the methotrexate group developed new lesions, while 7 of 25 in the steroid group developed new lesions. Methotrexate was found to be equally effective as oral minipulse steroids in controlling unstable vitiligo | Methotrexate: 20% developed nausea, Oral minipulse steroids: 20% developed weight gain and acneiform eruption |
Singh et al | 2014 | Minocycline vs. mini pulse dexamethasone | 50 | 6 | Minocycline was found comparably effective to oral mini pulse corticosteroids in halting actively-spreading disease | Minocycline: facial hyperpigmentation (8%), oral mucosal hyperpigmentation (12%), nausea, and vomitting (12%); Dexamethasone: weight gain, headache, and/or weakness (28%) |
Ultraviolet (UV) light therapy | ||||||
Bansal et al | 2013 | Psoralen + NB-UVB vs. NB-UVB | 45 | 5 | Psoralen + NB-UVB hastens repigmentation rates and yields greater repigmentation and decreased VASI scores vs. NB-UVB alone (29.2 vs. 21.7% at 5 months, p=0.043) | P-NBUVB: nausea (45%), hyperpigmentation (25%); both arms: phototoxicity (5%), depigmented macuoles (10%) |
El Mofty et al | 2013 | PUVA vs. BB-UVA | 45 | 5 | Mean repigmentation with PUVA comparable to BB-UVA suggesting the latter might be useful when oral psoralens are contraindicated | PUVA: phototoxicity (61.5%), thickening (23.1%); BB-UVA: phototoxicity (21.4%) |
El Mofty et al | 2013 | NB-UVB vs. BB-UVA | 45 | 5 | NB-UVB yield significantly greater repigmentation rates than BB-UVA (64% ± 27.4 vs 44% ± 29.8 at 4 months, p=0.047) | NB-UVB: burning sensation and/or erythema (15%) |
El Zawahry et al | 2012 | NB-UVB vs. UVA1 | 40 | 3 | NB-UVB superior to UVA1 based on percentage change in VASI score (median: -6.7% vs. 0%, P<0.001) and change in VETF area score (-4.4% vs. 0%, P=0.001) | NB-UVB: phototoxicity (5%), koebnerization (5%) |
Sapam et al | 2012 | NB-UVB vs. PUVA | 56 | 6 | No significant difference in mean degree of repigmentation between the NB-UVB group and PUVA group (45% vs. 40%, respectively) | NB-UVB: pruritis (7.1%); PUVA: pruritus (19.2%), thickening (15.4%), hyperpigmentation (7.7%), giddiness (7.7%), erythema (7.7%), nausea (7.7%) |
Siadat et al | 2014 | NB-UVB vs. oral minocycline | 42 | 3 | NB-UVB therapy reduced disease activity by 76.2% vs. 33.9% with minocycline (p<0.05), and was better able to reduce lesion diameters (p=0.031) | NB-UVB: pruritus, erythema (% not reported); minocycline: oral mucosal hyperpigmentation, GI complaints, and/or headache (14.2%) |
Singh et al | 2013 | PUVA-Sol vs. PUVA | 35 | 9 | PUVA-Sol fell short of PUVA in repigmentation and quality of life (QOL) improvement outcomes (26% vs. 46% repigmentation at 9 months, respectively, p=0.06; mean QOL metric post-PUVA-sol treatment was a third of that post-PUVA at the same time point, p=0.04) | PUVA-Sol: phototoxicity (64.7%); PUVA: phototoxicity (100%) |
Monochromatic excimer light laser (MEL) therapy | ||||||
Le Duff et al | 2010 | MEL vs. excimer lamp | 20 | 3 | Both treatments showed similar efficacy with >50% mean repigmentation; the lamp induced more erythema than the laser | Both arms: erythema (“majority of patients”) |
Shi et al | 2013 | MEL vs. excimer lamp | 14 | 2 | Both treatments exhibited similar efficacies in treating vitiligo; >50% in 79% of patches treated by laser and 87.5% of patches treated by lamp | MEL laser: erythema (92.9%); excimer lamp: erythema (85.7%) |
Verhaeghe et al | 2011 | MEL vs. NB-UVB | 11 | 3 | No vitiliginous patches achieved >50% repigmentation after 3 months of MEL. 20% of lesions treated with NB-UVB achieved repigmentation scores >50% | MEL laser: erythema (82%), burning sensation (27%); NB-UVB: erythema (82%), burning sensation (18%) |
Combination UV and topical or systemic therapies | ||||||
Akdeniz et al | 2014 | Topical calcipotriol + NB-UVB + betamethasone vs. NB-UVB + topical calcipotriol vs. NB-UVB | 45 | 6 | Significantly greater repigmentation at 6 months observed with topical calcipotriol + NB-UVB + betamethasone therapy compared to NB-UVB alone (63.3 ± 7.6% vs 46.7 ± 8.0%, p = 0.0048). No other significant differences reported | None reported |
Anbar et al | 2014 | Latanoprost + NB-UVB vs. Latanoprost vs. NB-UVB | 22 | 3 | At 6 month follow-up, latanoprost-induced repigmentation was comparable to that of the NB-UVB treatment. The latanoprost-NB-UVB combination was superior to other treatment arms, with 75% of patients retaining their repigmentation at 6 month follow-up | None reported |
Baldo et al | 2014 | Topical tacrolimus + NB-UVB | 48 | 9 | NB-UVB therapy was deemed comparable to 0.1% topical tacrolimus, with at least partial repigmentation rates of ~70% | Erythema and/or folliculitis (16%) |
Lim et al | 2015 | NB-UVB + percutaneous afamelanotide vs. NB-UVB | 55 | 6 | Afamelanotide + NB-UVB, vs. NB-UVB alone, yielded faster repigmentation of facial (41 vs. 61 days, p=0.001) and upper extremity lesions (46 vs. 69 days, p=0.003), and greater 6-month repigmentation rates (48.6% vs. 33.3%) | Combination: erythema (68%), nausea (18%), pruritis (7%), hyperpigmentation (7%) NB-UVB: erythema (82%), pruritis (7%), burning sensation (7%) |
Nordal et al | 2011 | Topical tacrolimus + NB-UVB vs. NB-UVB | 40 | 3 | 42.1% repigmentation observed with tacrolimus + NB-UVB vs. 29% with NB-UVB monotherapy. A correlation between the number of topical tacrolimus applications and the repigmentation response was observed (p=0.044) | None reported |
Combination MEL laser (MEL) and topical therapies | ||||||
Hui-Lan et al | 2009 | Topical pimecrolimus + MEL laser treatment vs. MEL | 48 | 4 | Topical pimecrolimus + MEL laser treatment yielded significantly greater repigmentation at 7.5 months than MEL laser treatment alone (71% vs. 50% of subjects with >50% repigmentation, p=0.001) | Combination: burning sensation (16.7%), pruritis (14.6%) MEL laser: erythema (“common”), burning sensation (12.5%) |
Nistico et al | 2012 | Topical tacrolimus + MEL laser treatment vs. MEL laser treatment | 52 | 3 | Repigmentation rates of the MEL laser treatment + tacrolimus (+vitamin E) vs. MEL laser treatment (+vitamin E) not statistically significant (p=0.36) at 4 months (70% vs. 55% with > 50% repigmentation) | Combination: erythema and/or burning sensation (25%) MEL laser: erythema and/or burning sensation (30%) |
PUVA=psoralen UVA; PUVA sol=psoralen UVA (sunlight as PUVA source); NB-UVB=narrowband UVB; MEL=meditec excimer light laser; QOL=quality of life; BB-UVB=broadband UVB; VASI=vitiligo area scoring index