Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05786885 |
Other study ID # |
22091990 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
April 2023 |
Est. completion date |
July 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2023 |
Source |
Cairo University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The study is a randomized controlled clinical trial comparing the use of microneedling with
vitamin C against injecting vitamin C for depigmentation in physiological gingival melanin
hyperpigmentation in a group of patients attending the outpatient clinic of the department of
Oral Medicine and Periodontology-Cairo University.
Description:
Melanin hyperpigmentation has been linked to a number of etiological and pathological causes,
including smoking, heavy metal toxicity, heredity, endocrine disorders, UV exposure,
inflammation, benign and malignant lesions, and intentional cultural tattooing. In order to
determine whether the reason is physiological or pathological, a thorough medical history of
the patient is essential.
With the introduction of gingival depigmentation as a periodontal surgical procedure, the
hyperpigmented gingival tissues are removed utilizing a variety of surgical treatment
methods, such as scalpel excision, bur abrasion, free gingival grafts, ADMA, lasers,
cryosurgery, electro surgery.
The surgical approaches, albeit the most popular, are associated by anxiety, bleeding, a
significant postoperative wound, and recurrence. Those methods could also have negative
consequences include chemical burns, delayed healing, extreme pain and suffering, bone loss,
and trouble controlling the depth of de-epithelization.
Vitamin C has been developed as a treatment for melanin pigmentation, due to its suppression
of tyrosine activity, which directly downregulates dopaquinone synthesis, a precursor in the
manufacture of melanin, as well as its epigenetic inhibitory effect on genes involved in
melanocyte function. In vivo studies showed its impact on melanocyte function and
quantitative productivity as well as how it affected melanocyte and keratinocyte cell-to-cell
contact in a dose-dependent manner.
Local application of vitamin C to the gingiva as an adjunct to surgical depigmentation
techniques has been shown in several case studies to depigment the gingiva or delay the
repigmentation of the gingiva, supporting the possibility of using Vitamin C alone as a
treatment modality for melanin-related gingival hyperpigmentation. In a study comparing the
use of vitamin C injections versus the conventional surgical method, a statistical
significant difference between both groups was found at one month regarding the mean values
of changes in pigmentation index.
Needle-based delivery systems are designed to deliver medications by rupturing the skin or
mucosal barrier, making the medication easily accessible to the targeted tissues. The
collagen induction therapy method known as microneedling approach involves puncturing the
skin repeatedly. Microneedling has been widely used in dermatology recently since it is a
method that is efficient, straightforward, affordable, well-tolerated, and advantageous from
both a cosmetic and therapeutic standpoint.
Instead of cutting through the cells, the used microneedles create microconduits that
increase the skin's permeability and blood flow into the epidermis. This procedure makes it
easier for topical drugs to cross the stratum corneum layer. Additionally, growth factors
that support the regeneration of collagen and elastin are created.
The microneedling principle is suggested to be used in the treatment of gingival
hyperpigmentation, compared to the currently employed techniques such as scalpel surgery,
laser ablation, bur abrasion, and electrocautery which frequently result in complications,
microneedling could be a promising minimally invasive, straightforward, painless, and
cost-effective treatment modality for gingival depigmentation. Subsequent randomized
controlled clinical trials are required to validate the findings for the case report that
mentioned the use of Dermapen with vitamin C topical paste as a novel technique for gingival
depigmentation.
Vitamin C has the ability to suppress tyrosine activity, which directly downregulates
dopaquinone synthesis, a precursor in the manufacture of melanin, as well as its epigenetic
inhibitory effect on genes involved in melanocyte function. Thus, Vitamin C injections can be
used as a minimal invasive technique for physiological gingival melanin hyperpigmentation.
Microneedling has been widely used in dermatology due to its ability to create microconduits
that increase the skin's permeability and blood flow into the epidermis. Thus, Dermapen
together with vitamin C topical paste has been used as a novel technique for gingival
depigmentation in a case report.