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Comparative study of the efficacy and safety of two grafting procedures (an automated epidermal harvesting system and non-cultured epidermal cell suspension) in the treatment of stable vitiligo. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared the effectiveness and safety of non-cultured epidermal cell suspension versus an automated epidermal harvesting system in treating stable vitiligo.
  • It involved 30 patients with symmetrical vitiligo patches, assessing the methods based on re-pigmentation success and pain levels.
  • Results showed the non-cultured technique was more effective, but the automated method had fewer complications and was easier and pain-free, especially benefitting patients with darker skin tones.
  • Limitations included a small sample size and patch size restrictions.

Article Abstract

Background The non-cultured epidermal cell suspension method is a well-established but tedious grafting modality in the management of stable vitiligo. Recently a more user-friendly automated epidermal harvesting system has been introduced. Aim This was a pilot study to compare the efficacy and safety outcomes of the above two grafting procedures. Study design The study was a single-blinded split-body randomised controlled trial. After scientific and ethical clearance, the trial was registered with CTRI (CTRI/2018/05/014225). Thirty consenting patients of stable vitiligo with 60 near-symmetrical patches were recruited. Block randomisation was done using computer-generated randomisation software and each patch was allocated either of the two grafting modalities. Efficacy was assessed by the Physician Global Assessment Scale on serial images and pain by the Numerical Rating Pain Scale. Results and conclusion The non-cultured epidermal cell suspension was found to be an overall statistically superior technique to the automated epidermal harvesting system in terms of efficacy (re-pigmentation). Both donor and recipient site complications were significantly less with the automated epidermal harvesting system grafting and this method had the distinct advantage of being a painless and easy technique with minimal recovery time. A novel observation was that a good colour match and near-complete re-pigmentation occurred in patients with a darker skin colour with both techniques. Limitations The main limitation of our study was the small sample size. Also, the size of the treated patches was limited such that they could be covered by the 5 × 5 cm size of the automated epidermal harvesting system blade. However, a larger area can be covered with multiple sessions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/IJDVL_1010_2021DOI Listing

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