Current Status of Cell-Based Therapies for Vitiligo
Abstract
1. Background
2. Melanocytes and Keratinocytes as the Targets for Vitiligo Therapy
3. Melanocyte–Keratinocyte Cell Transplantation (MKCT)
4. ReCell System in Vitiligo Therapy
5. Autologous Non-Cultured, Non-Trypsinized Epidermal Cell Grafting
6. Cell Transplantations in Combination Therapy with a Narrowband Ultraviolet B (NB-UVB) or Autologous Platelet-Rich Plasma
7. Are Cell-Based Therapies Appropriate for All Vitiligo Patients? Limitations and Challenges
8. Conclusions
Therapy | Vitiligo Characteristics | Patients Number | Age Range (Years) | Clinical Results | Evaluation Time | Reference | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Melanocyte transplantation | |||||||
Cultured autologous melanocytes | Stable vitiligo | 25 | 13–72 | Almost complete repigmentation in 6 out of 11 cases, in 4 cases, 40–71% of the grafted achromatic area was repigmented | 1–20 months | Chen et al. [16] | 2000 |
Autologous transplanted epidermal cell suspensions | Stable vitiligo or vitiligo with doubts about stability | 28 | 5–65 | A total of 77% repigmentation | 12 months | Van Geel et al. [1] | 2004 |
Autologous cultured pure melanocyte suspension | Stable vitiligo | 120 | 7–72 | Overall, 84% of patients with localized vitiligo experienced 90% to 100% coverage | 6–66 months | Chen et al. [28] | 2004 |
Autologous melanocyte rich cell suspension (non-cultured) and cultured melanocyte technique | Stable vitiligo | 27 | 21–30 | Over 90% repigmentation in 52.17% of cases with the autologous melanocyte-rich cell suspension technique and in 50% with the melanocyte culture technique | Up to 6 months | Pandya et al. [12] | 2005 |
Autologous cultured pure melanocytes | Stable vitiligo for at least 6 months | 102 | 8–12, 13–17, Adults: mean 29 | Repigmentation of 50% or more in children, adolescents, and adults were 83.3%, 95.0% and 84.0% cases, respectively | At least 6 months | Hong et al. [17] | 2011 |
Autologous melanocytes culture on a denuded amniotic membrane | Stable vitiligo | 4 | 13–29 | A total of 90–95% repigmentation in all patients | Up to 6 months | Redondo et al. [18] | 2011 |
Autologous melanocytes transplantation | Stable vitiligo and developing vitiligo | 16 | 19–40 | In 87.5% of lesions, a repigmentation of >50%; no relapse was observed | 5 years | Zhu et al. [26] | 2017 |
Autologous epidermal cell suspension | Stable vitiligo | 300 | Range not stated, mean 27.1 | Repigmentation stability remained in most treated patches | Up to 30 months | Orouji et al. [35] | 2017 |
Autologous non-cultured and trypsinized melanocyte grafting | Stable vitiligo | 28 | Range not stated, mean 25.9 | Over 50% in the face and neck, trunk, upper extremity, and genitals in 57.4%, 20.4%, 16.7%, and 5.5% patients, respectively | 18 months | Ghorbani et al. [14] | 2022 |
Hair follicle cell transplantation | |||||||
Non-cultured extracted hair follicular outer root sheath (ORS) cell suspension transplantation | Stable vitiligo for at least 3 months | 14 | 17–32 | Nine out of fourteen patients achieved >75% repigmentation | 1–15 months | Mohanty et al. [19] | 2011 |
Autologous non-cultured outer root sheath hair follicle cell suspension (NCORSHFS) | Stable vitiligo | 30 | 8–38 | The number of melanocytes and HFSC transplanted were significantly higher among patients achieving optimum (>75%) repigmentation | 24 weeks | Vinay et al. [20] | 2015 |
Hair follicle outer root sheath cell transplantation (EHF ORS) | Stable vitiligo | 20 | 18–43 | Mean repigmentation of 80.15% with 90–100% in 60% of patients | 6 months | Shah et al. [21] | 2016 |
Non-cultured, extracted follicular outer root sheath suspension (NC-EHF-ORS-CS) | Stable vitiligo | 2 | 18–36 | The mean repigmentation was 52% and >75% repigmentation in 32% of patients | 6 months | Kumar et al. [22] | 2018 |
Autologous hair follicle cell derived melanocytes transplantation | Stable vitiligo | 26 | 19–50 | Overall, 34.6% of patients achieved excellent repigmentation, 50% had good, 11.5% had fair, and 3.9% had poor repigmentation | 1 year | Shi et al. [23] | 2020 |
Keratinocyte transplantation | |||||||
Autologous cultured keratinocytes | Stable vitiligo | 27 | 9–48 | Twelve patients had 90% or more repigmentation after the first surgery, which increased by two cases when patients with multiple surgeries were included | At least 1 year | Matsuzaki and Kumagai [30] | 2013 |
Melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation | |||||||
Cultured epithelial autographs with keratinocytes seeded at high density | Stable or active vitiligo | 5 | 32–71 | Out of five patients, repigmentation was only achieved in one | N/A | Phillips et al. [33] | 2001 |
Melanocyte–keratinocyte cell transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 184 | 9 to 70 | Overall, 53% in the generalized vitiligo and 84% in the segmental vitiligo group showed 95–100% repigmentation | Up to 1 year | Mulekar et al. [43] | 2003 |
Autologous non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte cell transplantation (MKT) | Stale vitiligo for at least 1 year | 134 | At least 12 | Overall, 84% in the segmental and 73% in the focal vitiligo group showed 95–100% repigmentation | Up to 5 years | Mulekar et al. [47] | 2004 |
Autologous non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte cell transplantation (MKT) | Stable genital vitiligo | 3 | 24–39 | Near-complete repigmentation observed in all patients | Up to 1 year | Mulekar et al. [49] | 2005 |
Autologus melanocyte–keratinocyte cell transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo (for at least 6 months) | 142 | 18–70 | Overall, 56% patients showed 95–100% repigmentation | Up to 6 years | Mulekar et al. [48] | 2005 |
Noncultured melanocyte–keratinocyte cell transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo (for at least 6 months) | 49 | 7–65 | For bilateral vitiligo, more than 50% of patients showed >65% repigmentation. For unilateral vitiligo, all but two patients treated for the eyelids vitiligo showed >65% repigmentation | N/A | Mulekar et al. [55] | 2009 |
Autologous dissociated epidermal cell suspensions | Stable vitiligo | 10 | 17–52 | Overall, 76–100% repigmentation in 40% of patients | 6 months | Khodadadi et al. [34] | 2010 |
Non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 25 | 8–45 | Overall, 23% of patients showed 90–100% repigmentation | 6–17 months | El-Zawahry et al. [56] | 2011 |
Non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 8 | 13–43 | Of eight lesions treated with non-cultured MKT, four lesions showed 96–100%, one lesion 65–95%, and three lesions 0–25% repigmentation | 4 months | Toossi et al. [50] | 2011 |
Melanocytes and keratinocytes transplantation using the sandpaper technique combined with dermabrasion or only dermabrasion | Stable vitiligo | 11 | 21–65 | At the end of treatment, both techniques showed similar repigmentation with repigmentation in nine cases (87% to 6%) of pigmenation in the transfer group and nine cases (94% to 5%) in the dermabrasion group | 3 months | Quezada et al. [52] | 2011 |
Melanocyte–keratinocyte cell suspension with dermabrasion (MKT+ DA) and dermabrasion alone (DA) | Stable vitiligo | 11 | 35–48 | Slightly better pigmentation occurred with DA+MKT in 7 out of 11 patients | 12 months | Vazquez-Martinez et al. [51] | 2011 |
Autologous melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 23 | 18–60 | Overall, 95–100% repigmentation in 17% | 3–6 months | Huggins et al. [53] | 2012 |
Autologous transplantation of non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte cell suspension (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 20 | 10–50 | Overall, 25% of patients showed ≥90% Repigmentation; the best results were observed in face and neck | Up to 24 months | Ramos et al. [58] | 2017 |
Autologous melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo without fingertip involvement | 100 | 9–60 | MKT could maintain repigmentation for at least 72 months | 12–72 months | Silpa-Archa et al. [44] | 2017 |
Autologous non-cultured keratinocyte–melanocyte suspension (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 5 | Range not stated, mean 20 | Overall, 76–100% repigmentation in 60% of patients | 6 months | Benzekri and Gauthier [25] | 2017 |
Autologous non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 602 | 4–67 | Overall, 84.3% of patients achieved ≥50% repigmentation at the 6th month evaluation; at 6 years, 23% showed relapse | 6 years | Altalhab et al. [46] | 2019 |
Combination therapies | |||||||
Non-cultured autologous melanocytes and keratinocytes combined with UVA or UVB | Stable vitiligo | 4 | 30–52 | Overall, 85–100% repigmentation achieved at 6 to 20 months | 6–20 months | van Geel et al. [68] | 2001 |
Narrow-band ultraviolet B therapy for cultured autologous melanocyte transplantation patients | Stable vitiligo | 437 | 5–55 | A total of 20 sessions of NB-UVB treatment before transplantation and 30 sessions after transplantation gave the best repigmentation | 6 months | Zhang et al. [66] | 2014 |
Cultured autologous melanocyte transplantation (CMT combined with narrowband ultraviolet B (NB-UVB) | Stable vitiligo | 8 | 7–28 | All patients treated with low-density CMT combined with NB-UVB obtained more than 90% repigmentation | 1 year | Yao et al. [67] | 2017 |
Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) used to suspend non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (NCES) before transplantation | Stable vitiligo | 21 | Range not stated, mean 23.1 | Suspending NCES in PRP can result in significantly greater mean repigmentation | 6 months | Parambath et al. [70] | 2019 |
ReCell | |||||||
ReCell vs. conventional melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKT) | Stable vitiligo | 5 | 18–40 | Overall, 40% of lesions treated with ReCell showed 100% repigmentation, while 20% of lesions failed to repigment. Overall, 60% of lesions treated with conventional MKT showed 100% repigmentation and 20% failed to repigment | 4 months | Mulekar et al. [62] | 2008 |
ReCell | Stable vitiligo | 15 | 18–45 | Repigmentation greater than 75% was recorded in 12 (80%) patients | Minimum 6 months | Cervelli et al. [61] | 2009 |
ReCell | Stable vitiligo | 1 | N/A | The patient had >90% repigmentation | N/A | Cervelli et al. [62] | 2010 |
Non-cultured cellular grafting | |||||||
Autologous, non-cultured cellular grafting (MKTP) | Stable vitiligo for at least 6 months | 25 | 4–16 | Overall, 95–100% repigmentation in 62% of patients | 9–54 months | Mulekar et al. [60] | 2010 |
Autologous non-cultured epidermal suspension (NCES) | Stable vitiligo | 13 | 8–17 | Overall, 79% of lesions had >90% repigmentation | 1 year | Sahni et al. [61] | 2011 |
Non-cultured cellular grafting | Stable vitiligo | 13 | 15–52 | Overall, 91% of the patients achieved >50% repigmentation | 3–12 months | Gan et al. [59] | 2012 |
Non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (NCES) | Stable vitiligo | 36 | 16–47 | More than 75% repigmentation in 63.75% of lesions | 6–18 months | Holla et al. [57] | 2013 |
Non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (NCES) | Stable vitiligo | 37 | Range not stated, mean: 28.3 (group 1) 24.1(group 2) 22.4 (group 3) | Cell count significantly lower in the ORSHFS compared with NCES with no significant difference in the repigmentation outcome | 18 months | El-Zawahry et al. [39] | 2017 |
Autologous non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (NCES) | Stable vitiligo | 41 | 8–50 | Overall, 80.5% of patients showed 51–75% repigmentation, and 17.1% showed complete or almost complete repigmentation | 6–9 months | Liu et al. [72] | 2019 |
Non-cultured autologous epidermal cell grafting resuspended in hyaluronic acid (A ready-to-use kit, Viticell®) | Stable vitiligo | 36 | 17–67 | For difficult-to-treat lesions, no repigmentation ≥50% was observed; for other locations, the success rate was significantly higher | 12 months | Bertolotti et al. [76] | 2020 |
Comparative studies | |||||||
Three different transplantation methods: autologous cultured melanocytes, ultrathin epidermal sheets, and basal layer cell suspension | Stable or unstable vitiligo | 132 | 8–61 | Stable vitiligo patients responded in most cases with 100% repigmentation in all studied treatments | 1–7 years | Olsson et al. [27] | 2002 |
Autologous non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (NCES) compared to suction blister epidermal grafting (SBEG) | Stable vitiligo | 41 | 12–40 | Overall, 90–100% repigmentation in 71% of lesions in the NCES group and 27% of lesions in the SBEG group | 4 months | Budania et al. [37] | 2012 |
Autologous non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (NCES) compared to autologous non-cultured extracted hair follicle outer root sheath cell suspension (NCORSHFS) | Stable vitiligo | 30 | 13–35 | Overall, 90–100% repigmentation in 83% of lesions in the NCES group and 65% of lesions in the NCORSHFS group | 4 months | Singh et al. [38] | 2013 |
Comparison between autologous melanocyte rich cell suspension (NCMT technique) and cultured melanocyte technique (CMT) | Stable vitiligo | 25 | N/A | More than 70% repigmentation in 62.17% cases treated with NCMT and in 52% with the CMT | 6 months | Verma et al. [13] | 2014 |
Blister roof grafting (BG), cultured melanocytes transplantation (CMT) and non-cultured epidermal cell suspension transplantation (NCES) | Stable vitiligo | 83 | Range not stated, mean 25 | More than 50% repigmentation in 92%, 82%, and 81% of the 83 patients treated with the BG, CMT, and NCES methods, respectively | 12 months | Bao et al. [36] | 2015 |
Autologous cultured melanocytes transplantation (CMT) and non-cultured epidermal cell suspension transplantation (NCES) | Stable vitiligo | 30 | Range not stated, mean 26.1 | Overall, 66.7% of cases showed more than 70% repigmentation with CMT; NCES resulted in less than 40% repigmentation in most of the cases | 3–6 months | Verma et al. [40] | 2015 |
Excimer laser alone compared to non-cultured melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation (MKCT) alone and combination therapy | Stable vitiligo | 10 | 21–48 | Excimer laser combined with non-cultured MKCT improves the repigmentation rate, with an average of 41.9% reduction of depigmented area surface | 2 weeks | Ebadi et al. [54] | 2015 |
Epidermal melanocyte transfer (EMT) compared to hair follicular melanocyte transfer (HFMT) | Stable vitiligo | 11 | 12–42 | More than 90% repigmentation observed in 83.33% patches of the EMT group and 43.33% in the HFMT group | 6 months | Donaparthi et al. [77] | 2016 |
Autologous non-cultured epidermal cell suspension (ECS) and follicular cell suspension (FCS) | Stable vitiligo | 5 | 21–33 | Superior repigmentation obtained in combined ECS and FCS treatment | 4 months | Razmi et al. [41] | 2017 |
Hair follicle transplantation (follicular unit transplantation, FUT) and autologous non-cultured, non-trypsinized epidermal cells grafting (Jodhpur Technique-JT) | Stable vitiligo | 30 | 21–25 | More than 75% repigmentation was observed in 70% lesions in the FUT group and 72% of lesions in the JT group | 20 weeks | Lamoria et al. [24] | 2020 |
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Domaszewska-Szostek, A.; Polak, A.; Słupecka-Ziemilska, M.; Krzyżanowska, M.; Puzianowska-Kuźnicka, M. Current Status of Cell-Based Therapies for Vitiligo. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2023, 24, 3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24043357
Domaszewska-Szostek A, Polak A, Słupecka-Ziemilska M, Krzyżanowska M, Puzianowska-Kuźnicka M. Current Status of Cell-Based Therapies for Vitiligo. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2023; 24(4):3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24043357
Chicago/Turabian StyleDomaszewska-Szostek, Anna, Agnieszka Polak, Monika Słupecka-Ziemilska, Marta Krzyżanowska, and Monika Puzianowska-Kuźnicka. 2023. "Current Status of Cell-Based Therapies for Vitiligo" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 24, no. 4: 3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24043357
APA StyleDomaszewska-Szostek, A., Polak, A., Słupecka-Ziemilska, M., Krzyżanowska, M., & Puzianowska-Kuźnicka, M. (2023). Current Status of Cell-Based Therapies for Vitiligo. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 24(4), 3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24043357