Vitiligo and alopecia areata are both common, T cell-driven autoimmune diseases of the skin. Recognizing
similarities and differences between these diseases will promote a more complete understanding of their
pathogenesis as well as the development of new treatments.
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Parallels Between Vitiligo and Alopecia Areata
1. Understanding parallels between vitiligo
and alopecia areata
John E. Harris, MD, PhD
Associate Professor
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Follow on Twitter:
@HarrisVitiligo
Website:
Umassmed.edu/vitiligo
2. DISCLOSURE OF RELEVANT
RELATIONSHIPS WITH INDUSTRY
John E. Harris, MD, PhD
Investigator â Pfizer, Genzyme/Sanofi, Stiefel/GSK, Celgene
Consultant â Pfizer, Abbvie, Combe, Genzyme/Sanofi, Concert, Mitsubishi
Tanabe Pharma, Novartis, Aclaris Therapeutics, The Expert Institute
I will be discussing off-label drug uses
3. Vitiligo and alopecia areata: apples and oranges?
John E. Harris
Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA
Correspondence: John E. Harris, MD, PhD, Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, LRB
325, 364 Plantation St, Worcester, MA 01605, USA, Tel.: 508-856-1982, Fax: 508-856-5463, e-mail: John.Harris@umassmed.edu
Abstract: Vitiligo and alopecia areata are common autoimmune
diseases of the skin. Vitiligo is caused by the destruction of
melanocytes and results in the appearance of white patches on any
part of the body, while alopecia areata is characterized by patchy
hair loss primarily on the scalp, but may also involve other areas
as well. At ïŹrst glance, the two diseases appear to be quite
different, targeting different cell types and managed using different
treatment approaches. However, the immune cell populations and
cytokines that drive each disease are similar, they are closely
associated within patients and their family members, and vitiligo
and alopecia areata have common genetic risk factors, suggesting
that they share a similar pathogenesis. Like apples and oranges,
vitiligo and alopecia areata have some obvious differences, but
similarities abound. Recognizing both similarities and differences
will promote research into the pathogenesis of each disease, as
well as the development of new treatments.
Key w ords: adaptive immunity â alopecia areata â autoantigen â
autoimmunity â cytokine â IFN-c â innate immunity â T cell â treatment
â vitiligo
Accepted for publication 14 October 2013
Comparing apples and oranges
The phrase âlike comparing apples and orangesâ or, in some lan-
guages, âapples and pearsâ is commonly used to refer to compari-
sons of two different objects or concepts that are thought to be so
unrelated that they are not directly comparable. However, in his
book Sex, Drugs and Cocoa Puffs: a Low Culture Manifesto, Chuck
Klosterman criticizes this interpretation â âApples and oranges
arenât that different really. I mean theyâre both fruit. Their weight
is extremely similar. They both contain acidic elements. Theyâre
both roughly spherical. So how is this a metaphor for difference? I
could understand if you said âThatâs like comparing apples and
uraniumâ or âThatâs like comparing apples with baby wolverinesâ
.Those would all be valid examples of profound disparityâ(1). Oth-
ers have made similar arguments, even contributing experimental,
when injected intradermally, and topical steroids are limited in
efïŹcacy unless used under occlusion (5). It may be the depth of
inïŹammation in alopecia areata that makes nbUVB ineffective as a
treatment while psoralen plus ultraviolet A (PUVA), which pene-
trates deeper into the dermis, has had modest success (8). The
mechanism of contact immunotherapy with chemicals such as
squaric acid or DPCP is currently unknown; however, it may rely
on refocusing the immune response in the skin towards the epi-
dermis and towards a separate TH2 response (8). Despite these
obvious clinical differences, the two diseases share much in com-
mon, and understanding those commonalities may help us to bet-
ter hypothesize about their pathogeneses, test those hypotheses
and develop new treatments for our patients.
Approaches to categorizing autoimmune diseases
DOI: 10.1111/exd.12264
w w w .w ileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/EXD
View pointÂȘ 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Experimental Dermatology, 2013, 22, 785â789
4. Vitiligo and alopecia areata: apples and oranges?
John E. Harris
Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA
Correspondence: John E. Harris, MD, PhD, Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, LRB
325, 364 Plantation St, Worcester, MA 01605, USA, Tel.: 508-856-1982, Fax: 508-856-5463, e-mail: John.Harris@umassmed.edu
Abstract: Vitiligo and alopecia areata are common autoimmune
diseases of the skin. Vitiligo is caused by the destruction of
melanocytes and results in the appearance of white patches on any
part of the body, while alopecia areata is characterized by patchy
hair loss primarily on the scalp, but may also involve other areas
as well. At ïŹrst glance, the two diseases appear to be quite
different, targeting different cell types and managed using different
treatment approaches. However, the immune cell populations and
cytokines that drive each disease are similar, they are closely
associated within patients and their family members, and vitiligo
and alopecia areata have common genetic risk factors, suggesting
that they share a similar pathogenesis. Like apples and oranges,
vitiligo and alopecia areata have some obvious differences, but
similarities abound. Recognizing both similarities and differences
will promote research into the pathogenesis of each disease, as
well as the development of new treatments.
Key w ords: adaptive immunity â alopecia areata â autoantigen â
autoimmunity â cytokine â IFN-c â innate immunity â T cell â treatment
â vitiligo
Accepted for publication 14 October 2013
Comparing apples and oranges
The phrase âlike comparing apples and orangesâ or, in some lan-
guages, âapples and pearsâ is commonly used to refer to compari-
sons of two different objects or concepts that are thought to be so
unrelated that they are not directly comparable. However, in his
book Sex, Drugs and Cocoa Puffs: a Low Culture Manifesto, Chuck
Klosterman criticizes this interpretation â âApples and oranges
arenât that different really. I mean theyâre both fruit. Their weight
is extremely similar. They both contain acidic elements. Theyâre
both roughly spherical. So how is this a metaphor for difference? I
could understand if you said âThatâs like comparing apples and
uraniumâ or âThatâs like comparing apples with baby wolverinesâ
.Those would all be valid examples of profound disparityâ(1). Oth-
ers have made similar arguments, even contributing experimental,
when injected intradermally, and topical steroids are limited in
efïŹcacy unless used under occlusion (5). It may be the depth of
inïŹammation in alopecia areata that makes nbUVB ineffective as a
treatment while psoralen plus ultraviolet A (PUVA), which pene-
trates deeper into the dermis, has had modest success (8). The
mechanism of contact immunotherapy with chemicals such as
squaric acid or DPCP is currently unknown; however, it may rely
on refocusing the immune response in the skin towards the epi-
dermis and towards a separate TH2 response (8). Despite these
obvious clinical differences, the two diseases share much in com-
mon, and understanding those commonalities may help us to bet-
ter hypothesize about their pathogeneses, test those hypotheses
and develop new treatments for our patients.
Approaches to categorizing autoimmune diseases
DOI: 10.1111/exd.12264
w w w .w ileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/EXD
View pointÂȘ 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Experimental Dermatology, 2013, 22, 785â789
12. Subramanya RD, et al. Genomics 2010
Gene expression in alopecia areata
McPhee CG, et al. JID 2012
C3H mouse model - AA Humans - AA
Xing L, et al. Nat Med 2014