Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03973073

Effects of Combination Therapy With Camouflage in the Repigmentation of Vitiligo

Evaluation of the Potential Interference of Camouflage on the Treatment of Vitiligo: an Observer-blinded Self-controlled Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (actual)
Sponsor
Peking University People's Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Vitiligo is a common depigmented skin disorder characterized by the white patches of skin and mucous membrane. It can be cosmetically disfiguring and lead to serious psychological problems for patients with vitiligo. In view of the difficulty of vitiligo treatment, the combination therapy is the most recommended. Despite that, the process of repigmentation usually last for several months to several years. So it is of great value to explore therapeutic methods that can improve appearance, relieve patients' pain and improve their quality of life in the process of treatment. The use of camouflage can vastly improve quality of life, both the European and Japanese guidelines of vitiligo management recommend that once vitiligo is diagnosed, camouflage should be used. The first commercial camouflage agent in China is CapulinTM by 2004. The main component of it is dihydroxyacetone. The repigmented mechanism is to combine with the keratin and to form a special brown polymer, which makes leukoderma close to normal skin. While, it is unknown whether camouflage has an impact on the drug absorption, efficiency of phototherapy and thus influences the repigmentation of vitiligo. Thus, the investigators undergo a randomized open-label self-controlled study to estimate the effects of combination therapy between camouflage and topical application and/or NB-UVB in the repigmentation of vitiligo.

Detailed description

Vitiligo is a common depigmented skin disorder characterized by the white patches of skin and mucous membrane. It can be cosmetically disfiguring and lead to serious psychological problems for patients with vitiligo, especially when the exposed skin are involved, such as face and extremities. The pathogenesis of vitiligo is not clear yet. The most common methods of treatment include systemic corticosteroids, topical application (such as corticosteroids, calcineurin inhibitors), phototherapy, traditional medications and so on. In view of the difficulty of vitiligo treatment, the combination therapy between drugs and phototherapy is the most recommended. Despite that, the process of repigmentation usually last for several months to several years. So it is of great value to explore therapeutic methods that can improve appearance, relieve patients' pain and improve their quality of life in the process of treatment. For patients seeking to mask their vitiligo, camouflage options have historically been limited and been designated as a cosmetic, rather than a medical concern. As research has indicated that proper concealment of vitiligo lesions can vastly improve quality of life, we believe it is essential that dermatologists become aware of all the options available to their patients and that discussions of camouflage options be broached from the first visit. Until now, both the European and Japanese guidelines of vitiligo management recommend that once vitiligo is diagnosed, camouflage should be used. The first commercial camouflage agent in China is CapulinTM by 2004. The main component of CapulinTM is dihydroxyacetone, and it also contains natural plant extracts, moisturizers, emollients and natural pigments. The repigmented mechanism is to combine with the keratin and to form a special brown polymer, which makes leukoderma close to normal skin. Although the guidelines of home and abroad consider camouflage as the fundamental treatment of vitiligo, it is unknown whether camouflage has an impact on the drug absorption, efficiency of phototherapy and thus influences the repigmentation of vitiligo. Thus, the investigators undergo a randomized observer-blinded self-controlled study to estimate the effects of combination therapy between camouflage and topical application and/or NB-UVB in the repigmentation of vitiligo.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
COMBINATION_PRODUCTCapulinTMcamouflage
OTHERtopical applications and NB-UVBcombination therapy of vitiligo

Timeline

Start date
2019-08-01
Primary completion
2019-11-01
Completion
2019-11-21
First posted
2019-06-04
Last updated
2020-07-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03973073. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Effects of Combination Therapy With Camouflage in the Repigmentation of Vitiligo (NCT03973073) · Clinical Trials Directory