Combination therapy with the implantable drug afamelanotide and narrowband UV-B (NB-UV-B) phototherapy may help vitiligo patient achieve faster repigmentation than NB-UV-B alone. This response is even more pronounced among patients who have darker skin types, according to the study which appearsย ย in the September 17, 2014 issue of JAMA Dermatology.

โ€œThe results of this study offer hope to patients with vitiligo in the treatment of this disfiguring disease,โ€ conclude researchers led byย Henry W. Lim, MD, a dermatologist of Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit. The study comprised 55 vitiligo patients, including 28 in the combination therapy group and 27 who received NB-UV-B monotherapy.

Overall, results were better in the combination therapy group than in the monotherapy group at day 56. For the face and upper extremities, more patients achieved repigmentation at a faster rate (face, 41 versus 61 days; upper extremities, 46 versus 69 days). In the combination therapy group, repigmentation was 48.64% at day 168 compared with 33.26% in the monotherapy group, the study showed.

Individuals with darker skin responded more quickly to the combination treatment. โ€œBecause this group of patients has the most apparent visual appearance and hence psychological effects of the disease, rapidity of response for these patients would be most welcome.โ€

Clinuvel‘s proprietary first-in-class photoprotective drugย Afamelanotide orย SCENESSEยฎ increases the levels of melanin in the skin and shields against UV radiation and sunlight. It is delivered via a subcutaneous dissolving implant approximately the size of a grain of rice. Increased pigmentation of the skin appears after 2 days and lasts up to 2 months.