For facial vitiligo, pimecrolimus 1% shows superiority over placebo on F-VASI and global assessments in several RCTs/split-face designs.
Best results occur on face/neck; acral areas remain refractory without adjunct light therapy.
Tolerability is favorable with no steroid-induced atrophy; transient burning/tingling is the most common local effect.
Combination with NB-UVB or excimer 308 nm can accelerate and deepen repigmentation.
Abstract
This scholarly article summarizes randomized, placebo-controlled evidence for pimecrolimus 1% cream in facial vitiligo. It outlines trial design elements, dosing practices, efficacy on F-VASI and global assessments, safety profile, and practical integration with phototherapy.
Phototypes II–V; periocular/perioral lesions common
Interventions & Dosing
Table 3. Regimens and adjustments.
Arm
Regimen
Adjustments
Notes
Pimecrolimus 1%
BID thin layer on facial lesions
Reduce to QD for irritation; apply after emollient
Apply after phototherapy session if combined
Placebo/Vehicle
BID
—
Identical appearance/texture
Endpoints
Primary: Change in F-VASI at week 12–24 or proportion achieving F-VASI50.
Secondary: Time to first visible perifollicular islands; patient/physician global assessment; durability at follow-up.
Safety: Local irritation/burning; infection; ocular/periorificial tolerability.
Results
Table 4. Efficacy outcomes (structure for data entry).
Outcome
Pimecrolimus 1%
Placebo
Between-group
F-VASI % change (week 24)
Greater reduction
Lower reduction
Favours pimecrolimus
F-VASI50 responders
Higher proportion
Lower proportion
Favours pimecrolimus
Time to visible repigmentation
Earlier
Later
Favours pimecrolimus
Durability post-stop
Good with maintenance
Variable
Maintenance improves persistence
Safety
Table 5. Common local adverse effects (≥5%).
Event
Course
Management
Burning/tingling
Mild, transient at initiation
Reduce to QD; apply after emollient
Erythema/irritation
Occasional
Brief pause; re-titrate
Folliculitis
Rare
Spacing doses; short rest
No cutaneous atrophy or telangiectasia is expected with calcineurin inhibitors, supporting use on face/periorificial areas.
Practical Considerations
First-line topical for facial/periorificial lesions where steroid-sparing is preferred.
Combine with NB-UVB or excimer 308 nm if response plateaus.
Maintenance taper to QD or alternate-day once plateau achieved to preserve gains.
Limitations
Trials vary in design (split-face vs parallel), duration, and endpoints; long-term relapse prevention with pimecrolimus monotherapy is insufficiently characterized.
References
Randomized, placebo-controlled and split-face studies of pimecrolimus 1% in facial vitiligo.
Comparative analyses of calcineurin inhibitors vs topical steroids in cosmetically sensitive areas.
Guidance on integrating calcineurin inhibitors with phototherapy for enhanced outcomes.