Acral lesions of vitiligo: why are they resistant to photochemotherapy?

Abstract
Background Acral lesions of vitiligo are usually resistant to conventional lines of treatment as well as surgical interventions. Objective To clarify causes underlying resistance of acral lesions to pigmentation in vitiligo by studying some of the factors associated with mechanisms of repigmentation following photochemotherapy. Methods The study included twenty patients with active vitiligo. Skin biopsies were taken from lesional and perilesional skin of areas expected to respond (trunk and proximal limb) and skin of acral areas, before and after PUVA therapy. Sections were stained with H and E, Melan‐A, MHCII, CD1a, SCF and c‐kit protein. Results Before treatment acral areas showed significantly lower hair follicle density, melanocyte density, Langerhans cell (LC) density, epidermal MHCII expression, lesional SCF expression and perilesional c‐kit expression. Following treatment with PUVA in both non‐responsive acral and repigmenting non‐acral lesions identical immunohistochemical changes in the form of significant decrease in LC density, epidermal MHC‐II and SCF expression were observed. Conclusion The surprisingly similar histochemical changes in response to PUVA in acral and non‐acral lesions did not manifest with clinical repigmentation except in non‐acral ones. Factors such as inherent lower melanocyte density, lower melanocyte stem cell reservoirs and/or lower baseline epidermal stem cell factor may be considered as possible play makers in this respect.