Segmental vs Nonsegmental Vitiligo: Clinical Patterns, Prognosis, and Treatment Pathways

Key Takeaways

  • Segmental vitiligo (SV): early onset, unilateral/dermatomal streaks, rapid stabilization (months), poor response to light on acral—but excellent surgical candidacy once stable.
  • Nonsegmental vitiligo (NSV): bilateral/symmetric, waxing/waning activity; best global therapy is NB-UVB 311 nm ± tacrolimus; excimer 308 nm for rims.
  • Stability matters: two-visit confirmation (3–6 months apart) with photo + Wood’s lamp guides surgical timing in SV and maintenance planning in NSV.

Definitions & Mapping

  • SV: unilateral patch or streak respecting midline; often dermatomal/Blaschkoid hints; early hair involvement (leukotrichia) possible.
  • NSV: symmetric lesions (face/hands/axillae/periorificial); generalized or acrofacial patterns; frequent border activity episodes.
  • Map baseline with Wood’s lamp & dermoscopy to capture confetti and islands.

Clinical Patterns & Natural History

  • SV: short “active window” (weeks–months) → plateau; limited spread after stabilization.
  • NSV: chronic relapsing course; site-dependent response (face/neck > trunk/limbs > acral).
  • Koebnerization (friction/pressure) is chiefly an NSV driver; counsel on gear/shoes and skin care.

Prognosis & Activity

  • SV: better long-term localization; hair whitening predicts slower cutaneous fill-in.
  • NSV: relapse risk peaks within 6–12 months after stopping therapy—see Relapse & Maintenance.

Therapy Pathways

Table 1. First-line choices by subtype.
Subtype First-line Add-ons Notes
SV (early/active) Topicals (tacrolimus face/folds; short steroid pulses off-face) Excimer 308 nm to borders Goal: calm rim; prepare for stability check
SV (stable) Surgery (SBEG, punch/minigraft, FUE for leukotrichia) Post-op NB-UVB/excimer Color match best with SBEG on face
NSV (generalized) NB-UVB 311 nm 2–3×/wk Tacrolimus 0.1% face/folds; steroid pulses off-face Expect facial islands 4–8 wks
NSV (focal/rims) Excimer 308 nm Tacrolimus between light days Periorificial/hairy sites respond faster

When to Consider Surgery

  • SV: prime candidate after documented stability (no new/enlarging macules; quiet rim on Wood’s lamp) across ≥2 visits 3–6 months apart.
  • NSV: consider for small refractory plaques after adequate light/topical trials and stability confirmation.
  • Technique selection and pearls: see Surgical Options Beyond MKTP.

Tracking Stability (VIDA/VASI)

  • VIDA: activity score (recent spread/Koebner/confetti) helps decide surgery timing and maintenance need.
  • F-/T-VASI: quantify extent for baseline and milestones; pair with standardized photo protocol.

Comparison Tables

Table 2. SV vs NSV at a glance.
Feature SV NSV
Distribution Unilateral, dermatomal/Blaschkoid-like Bilateral/symmetric
Onset Often early Any age
Course Rapid stabilization Relapsing/remitting
Light response Variable; limited on acral Good (face/neck best)
Surgery role Major after stability Select cases if stable
Maintenance need Lower after graft success Higher; TRM-driven relapse risk
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