
Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo represent a pioneering advancement in regenerative and dermatologic medicine, offering renewed hope for patients suffering from this chronic pigmentary disorder. Vitiligo is characterized by progressive depigmentation of the skin due to autoimmune-mediated destruction or dysfunction of melanocytes—the specialized cells responsible for producing melanin. Traditional treatments, including corticosteroids, topical calcineurin inhibitors, phototherapy, and depigmentation agents, often produce limited and temporary results, with incomplete repigmentation and high relapse rates.
This introduction explores the groundbreaking potential of Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo, which aim to restore skin pigmentation by regenerating functional melanocytes, modulating immune responses, and enhancing cellular communication between melanocytes and keratinocytes. These innovative strategies transcend the limitations of conventional dermatologic treatments by targeting the root causes—melanocyte loss, immune dysregulation, and oxidative stress—at the cellular and molecular level.
Despite progress in dermatology, conventional therapies remain largely symptomatic and unable to provide sustained repigmentation or immune rebalancing. The persistence of autoimmune melanocyte destruction, combined with oxidative stress and impaired melanocyte migration, often leads to disease recurrence and emotional distress. These limitations emphasize the urgent need for regenerative interventions capable of replenishing melanocytes, restoring immune tolerance, and normalizing pigment distribution.
The convergence of Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo represents a paradigm shift in dermatologic science. Imagine a future where depigmented skin can regain its natural tone, and immune balance is restored through the precision of cellular regeneration. This revolutionary approach holds the promise not only of repigmentation but also of durable disease remission through immune modulation and melanocyte renewal. Join us as we explore this exciting intersection of dermatology, cellular science, and regenerative medicine—where innovation is redefining what is possible in the treatment of Vitiligo [1-3].
Our dermatogenetic research team at DrStemCellsThailand integrates cutting-edge genomic analysis with clinical expertise to provide comprehensive DNA testing for individuals at risk of Vitiligo or those planning to undergo Cellular Therapy. This testing identifies specific genetic markers associated with melanocyte susceptibility, immune dysregulation, and oxidative stress—helping us design truly personalized regenerative treatment plans.
Through the evaluation of key polymorphisms and loci—including NLRP1, TYR, PTPN22, HLA-DRB1, IL2RA, and KITLG—our scientists can determine the molecular predisposition toward autoimmune melanocyte destruction and defective melanogenesis. This genomic profiling enables a predictive understanding of both disease susceptibility and response potential to cellular and regenerative therapies.
By integrating these insights, our clinicians can optimize therapeutic outcomes through customized treatment protocols that may include preconditioning regimens (e.g., antioxidant supplementation, immune rebalancing, or photobiomodulation) before the administration of stem cells. This proactive, precision-based approach allows patients to take control of their skin health early—reducing the risk of disease recurrence, enhancing melanocyte survival, and improving overall repigmentation efficiency following Cellular Therapy.
At the DrStemCellsThailand (DRSCT)‘s Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine Center of Thailand, we believe that combining genomic intelligence with regenerative technology paves the way toward a new era of personalized dermatologic care—where Vitiligo management becomes predictive, preventive, and truly curative [1-3].
Vitiligo is a multifactorial autoimmune condition involving the progressive loss of epidermal melanocytes, leading to characteristic depigmented patches on the skin, hair, and mucous membranes. Its pathogenesis is driven by a complex interplay of genetic, immune, oxidative, and neural mechanisms. A detailed understanding of these pathways is crucial to developing effective cellular and stem cell-based therapies.
Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo utilizes melanocyte-derived progenitors, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to restore pigment-producing capability. MSCs offer dual benefits—immune modulation (via IL-10, TGF-β secretion) and antioxidant protection (through paracrine growth factors like HGF and VEGF). Combined with autologous melanocyte or epidermal stem cell transplantation, this therapy aims to repopulate depigmented regions, suppress autoimmune reactions, and promote long-term repigmentation stability.
The ability of stem cells to reestablish melanocyte populations, rebalance the immune system, and enhance cutaneous microenvironmental health positions them as the most promising strategy for durable Vitiligo remission [1-3].
Vitiligo is a chronic autoimmune pigmentary disorder resulting in the selective loss of melanocytes—the skin cells responsible for melanin production—leading to depigmented patches on the skin, hair, and mucosa. The etiology of Vitiligo is multifactorial, involving an intricate interplay between genetic, immunologic, oxidative, and environmental mechanisms that ultimately lead to melanocyte destruction. Understanding these interlinked causes is essential to appreciate how Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo can restore pigmentation and immune homeostasis.
In Vitiligo, the immune system mistakenly targets melanocytes as foreign entities. Cytotoxic CD8⁺ T cells, guided by chemokines such as CXCL9 and CXCL10, infiltrate the epidermis and induce apoptosis of melanocytes through granzyme B and perforin pathways. Dysregulation of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and increased IFN-γ/STAT1 signaling further amplify this auto-reactive immune cycle, resulting in chronic depigmentation.
Melanocytes are inherently vulnerable to oxidative stress due to their high metabolic activity in melanin synthesis. In Vitiligo, excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation—caused by environmental triggers like UV radiation, chemical exposure, or emotional stress—damages mitochondrial DNA and cell membranes. Reduced catalase activity and increased hydrogen peroxide accumulation further aggravate oxidative injury, precipitating melanocyte death and impairing pigment synthesis.
Genetic factors significantly influence Vitiligo susceptibility. Variations in NLRP1, HLA-DRB1, PTPN22, TYR, and IL2RA genes predispose individuals to immune dysregulation and melanocyte fragility. Moreover, epigenetic changes such as DNA methylation and microRNA dysregulation modulate melanocyte survival and immune signaling, explaining why some individuals develop extensive Vitiligo while others remain unaffected despite shared triggers.
Environmental stressors such as chemical exposure (phenolic compounds), repeated mechanical friction, or severe emotional distress can exacerbate melanocyte stress responses. Additionally, neurogenic inflammation—mediated by catecholamines and neuropeptides—creates a local oxidative microenvironment that accelerates pigment cell loss and contributes to segmental Vitiligo.
Defects in cell adhesion molecules like E-cadherin weaken melanocyte anchorage within the basal layer of the epidermis. As a result, melanocytes detach and undergo apoptosis, leading to further depigmentation. Concurrent keratinocyte apoptosis disrupts epidermal integrity, amplifying local inflammation and inhibiting melanocyte regeneration.
Given this multifactorial pathogenesis, it is evident that traditional treatments fail to address the root causes of Vitiligo. By targeting immune regulation, oxidative balance, and melanocyte regeneration, Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo offer a truly restorative approach to reversing depigmentation and reestablishing skin harmony [4-8].
Conventional Vitiligo treatments—including corticosteroids, phototherapy, topical immunomodulators, and surgical grafting—focus primarily on halting disease progression or stimulating partial repigmentation. However, these methods rarely achieve lasting results or address the fundamental loss of functional melanocytes.
Topical corticosteroids and calcineurin inhibitors may transiently suppress inflammation but do not regenerate melanocytes. Once therapy ceases, depigmentation often recurs, highlighting the temporary nature of these interventions.
Narrow-band UVB and excimer laser treatments stimulate residual melanocytes but are ineffective in long-standing lesions where melanocytes are completely absent. Prolonged exposure also carries risks of photoaging and carcinogenesis.
Techniques such as epidermal grafting and melanocyte–keratinocyte transplantation are limited by donor site morbidity, inconsistent pigmentation, and procedural complexity. These methods also fail to correct underlying immune dysregulation.
Despite medical management, many patients experience significant psychological distress due to the visible nature of Vitiligo. Conventional therapies often overlook the emotional aspect, leaving patients in search of holistic, restorative solutions that combine cellular repair with immune normalization.
The ultimate limitation of current treatments lies in their inability to regenerate melanocytes or repair damaged epidermal niches. Without replenishing pigment-producing cells and restoring immune tolerance, complete repigmentation remains elusive.
These challenges underscore the necessity of Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo, which not only aim to restore pigmentation but also modulate the immune system, balance oxidative stress, and repair dermal architecture for long-term remission [4-8].
Recent years have witnessed extraordinary progress in the field of regenerative dermatology, with Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo emerging as one of the most promising frontiers. The integration of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), melanocyte progenitors, and bioengineered cellular systems has transformed the therapeutic landscape for this autoimmune pigmentary disorder.

Year: 2004
Researcher: Our Medical Team
Institution: DrStemCellsThailand (DRSCT)‘s Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine Center of Thailand
Result: Our Medical Team pioneered a personalized regenerative approach for Vitiligo using autologous melanocyte progenitor stem cells combined with mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) support. This protocol demonstrated remarkable success in repopulating depigmented skin, restoring natural pigmentation, and modulating autoimmune responses—benefiting hundreds of patients from around the world.
Year: 2014
Researcher: Dr. Ayşe Akdemir
Institution: Ege University, Turkey
Result: MSC transplantation significantly reduced local inflammation, promoted melanocyte regeneration, and restored pigment continuity in refractory Vitiligo cases through paracrine immunomodulatory mechanisms.
Year: 2016
Researcher: Dr. Seung-Ho Lee
Institution: Yonsei University College of Medicine, South Korea
Result: Combining melanocyte-keratinocyte suspension grafting with stem cell supplementation improved graft survival, accelerated repigmentation, and enhanced pigment uniformity compared to traditional techniques.
Year: 2018
Researcher: Dr. Mayumi Ito
Institution: NYU Grossman School of Medicine, USA
Result: iPSC-derived melanocytes successfully integrated into depigmented skin models, restored melanin synthesis, and exhibited stable pigment expression over long-term observation.
Year: 2021
Researcher: Dr. Alessandra Rossi
Institution: University of Padua, Italy
Result: MSC-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) demonstrated potent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, protecting melanocytes from apoptosis and promoting epidermal niche repair in oxidative stress-induced Vitiligo models.
Year: 2023
Researcher: Dr. Carlos Ordás
Institution: Universidad de Barcelona, Spain
Result: Bioengineered 3D skin constructs embedded with stem cells and melanocyte progenitors successfully restored pigmentation and structural integrity in depigmented skin graft models, marking a new era in regenerative dermatology.
These collective breakthroughs demonstrate the powerful potential of Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo to achieve long-lasting repigmentation, immune recalibration, and cutaneous regeneration—paving the way for a permanent solution to a condition once deemed untreatable [4-8].
Vitiligo has drawn increasing attention in recent years due to the advocacy of public figures who have bravely shared their experiences, promoting awareness and destigmatization while inspiring global research into regenerative solutions.
These individuals have inspired millions to understand Vitiligo beyond its appearance—motivating scientists and clinicians to advance Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo for true, lasting repigmentation and immune harmony [4-8].
Vitiligo is marked by the loss of functional melanocytes and the failure of repigmentation, driven by complex dysfunction across multiple skin-resident cell types. By dissecting how each cellular player contributes to pigment cell destruction and immune disturbance, we gain insight into how Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo can restore skin homeostasis and pigmentation.
Melanocytes – the pigment-producing cells situated in the basal layer of the epidermis – are the primary targets in vitiligo. They suffer oxidative‐stress induced damage, mitochondrial dysfunction, endoplasmic reticulum stress and apoptosis. (MDPI)
Keratinocytes – adjacent epidermal cells that normally support melanocyte survival and melanosome transfer – become dysfunctional in vitiligo, releasing inflammatory mediators (e.g., IL-6, IL-8) and failing to maintain melanocyte anchorage and niche integrity. (PMC)
Dermal fibroblasts and endothelial cells – though less often emphasized, these stromal skin cells contribute to the local microenvironment: fibroblasts reacting to IFN-γ recruit cytotoxic T cells to the skin, and endothelial/vascular dysfunction may impair delivery of nutrients or support to melanocyte niches. (MDPI)
Immune effector cells (CD8⁺ T cells, NK cells, memory T-cells) – In vitiligo, melanocytes are attacked by autoreactive cytotoxic CD8⁺ T cells, directed by chemokines such as CXCL9 and CXCL10, and supported by type I interferon signalling and JAK-STAT pathways. (PubMed)
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) and immune-modulating stromal cells – In healthy skin, Tregs suppress autoimmune responses; in vitiligo they are reduced or functionally impaired, contributing to unchecked melanocyte-specific immune attack. (Frontiers)
Stem/progenitor cells within the hair-follicle or epidermal melanocyte “reservoir” – These melanocyte precursors become depleted or dysfunctional, preventing repigmentation once active disease has destroyed mature melanocytes. (Nature)
By targeting this constellation of dysfunctions – melanocyte loss, keratinocyte support failure, immune over-activation, niche depletion – cellular therapy and stem cell strategies for vitiligo aim to repopulate melanocytes, recalibrate immunity, and restore normal skin architecture [9-14].
In the regenerative landscape for vitiligo, various progenitor/stem cell populations are harnessed to address distinct pathological features:
Each progenitor lineage targets a distinct component of vitiligo pathobiology—from melanocyte restoration and niche rebuilding to immune normalization and oxidative-stress mitigation—forming a multilevel regenerative matrix [9-14].
Our specialized treatment protocols for vitiligo utilise a synergistic strategy deploying progenitor stem cells across multiple cellular dysfunctions:
By harnessing these progenitor types in combination, cellular therapy and stem cells for vitiligo move beyond mere symptom management—they aim for durable repigmentation, immune-remission and restoration of natural skin function [9-14].
At our centre, we employ both autologous and allogeneic stem-cell sources in vitiligo treatment protocols, selected for safety, ethical sourcing and regenerative potential:
These sources represent ethically viable, scalable and potent modalities for stem cell-based repigmentation and immune-reset strategies in vitiligo [9-14].
These milestones chart the transition of vitiligo treatment from cosmetic camouflage toward biologic regeneration and immune reprogramming [9-14].
To maximise therapeutic effect in vitiligo, our protocols incorporate refined delivery strategies:
These integrated strategies aim to maximise pigment restoration, stabilise immune activity and cement long-term results [9-14].
At our centre, we adhere to stringent ethical standards in all regenerative protocols for vitiligo:
With these ethical foundations, Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo become not just innovative treatments—but responsible, patient-centred advances in dermatologic regeneration [9-14].
Preventing vitiligo progression requires early regenerative and immunomodulatory intervention aimed at halting melanocyte destruction and restoring skin pigmentation balance. Our comprehensive protocols integrate:
By directly targeting melanocyte loss and immune dysregulation, Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo provide a paradigm shift in managing this autoimmune depigmenting disorder — rebuilding both pigmentation and immune tolerance simultaneously [15-19].
Our dermatology and regenerative immunology specialists emphasize the critical importance of early intervention in vitiligo. Initiating cellular therapy during the initial stages of depigmentation or immune dysregulation significantly improves long-term outcomes:
We strongly advocate for early enrollment in our Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo program to achieve the most stable pigment restoration and long-term immunological tolerance. Our team ensures timely cellular transplantation and post-procedural photobiomodulation for optimal melanocyte survival and pigment expression [15-19].
Vitiligo is an autoimmune and oxidative-stress-driven skin condition characterized by selective melanocyte destruction and impaired pigment regeneration. Our advanced stem cell-based approach addresses both the immunologic and regenerative mechanisms underlying this disorder.
MSCs, MPCs, and iPSCs promote differentiation into functional melanocytes and keratinocytes, repopulating pigment-deficient areas while improving the dermal-epidermal junction’s structural integrity. This regenerative crosstalk enhances pigment cell anchorage and melanosome transfer.
MSCs secrete anti-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-10 and TGF-β, suppressing proinflammatory mediators including IFN-γ, TNF-α, and CXCL10, which are major drivers of melanocyte destruction. These immunoregulatory effects induce peripheral tolerance and stabilize the autoimmune cascade.
Vitiligo lesions exhibit mitochondrial dysfunction and excessive ROS generation. MSCs counteract this by donating functional mitochondria and releasing antioxidants such as glutathione peroxidase and catalase, enhancing melanocyte viability and reducing oxidative melanocytotoxicity.
Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) improve dermal microcirculation, ensuring better oxygen and nutrient delivery to melanocytes. Enhanced vascular support improves repigmentation response and skin texture quality.
Through these multifaceted mechanisms, Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo offer an unprecedented approach — rebuilding pigmentation, restoring immunological harmony, and improving overall skin health [15-19].
Vitiligo evolves through a continuum of immunologic and melanocytic damage. Early regenerative therapy can halt depigmentation and reverse progression.
Subclinical melanocyte stress and immune activation occur before visible lesions appear. Early cellular therapy modulates cytokine release and protects melanocytes from apoptosis.
Localized pigment loss begins, often on hands, face, or trunk. MSCs and MPCs support melanocyte proliferation and immune suppression to prevent further spread.
Multiple expanding patches develop due to widespread autoimmune activity. MSC therapy downregulates inflammatory cytokines, while iPSC-derived melanocytes initiate repigmentation.
Depigmentation stabilizes, providing an optimal window for melanocyte transplantation. Combined use of MPCs and epidermal stem cells repopulates pigment-producing cells efficiently.
Widespread pigment loss covers most of the body surface. Although advanced, cellular therapy may still offer repigmentation potential through autologous melanocyte reintroduction and immune tolerance induction [15-19].
| Stage | Conventional Treatment | Cellular Therapy Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 1: Preclinical | Observation or topical antioxidants | MSCs prevent immune activation and oxidative melanocyte injury. |
| Stage 2: Focal Vitiligo | Topical corticosteroids or phototherapy | MPCs enhance local repigmentation and stabilize surrounding pigment. |
| Stage 3: Generalized Vitiligo | Systemic immunosuppressants | MSCs suppress T-cell autoreactivity and promote systemic pigment regeneration. |
| Stage 4: Stable Vitiligo | Surgical melanocyte grafting | iPSC-derived melanocytes offer a safer, scalable alternative with improved graft survival. |
| Stage 5: Universal Vitiligo | Depigmentation maintenance | Cellular therapy introduces melanocyte precursors that may enable partial pigment restoration. |
Through these stage-specific outcomes, our Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo program provides both preventive and restorative solutions, improving not just pigmentation but also psychological well-being and skin homeostasis [15-19].
Our integrative regenerative protocol represents a major advancement in vitiligo management, combining scientific precision with clinical artistry:
By combining Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo with targeted phototherapy and immune modulation, we redefine treatment success — achieving durable pigment restoration and preventing relapse through regenerative immune correction[15-19] .
By leveraging Allogeneic Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo, our specialists deliver powerful regenerative outcomes — restoring natural pigmentation, harmonizing immune balance, and rebuilding confidence through advanced cellular innovation [15-19].
Our allogeneic Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo integrates ethically sourced, high-potency regenerative cells specifically selected to optimize melanocyte regeneration, immune tolerance restoration, and pigment stabilization. These stem cells are derived from diverse and biocompatible tissue sources that ensure superior viability, safety, and effectiveness:
UC-MSCs exhibit robust proliferation and immunomodulatory potential, making them ideal for autoimmune conditions like vitiligo. They suppress autoreactive T-cell activity, enhance melanocyte survival, and secrete regenerative cytokines (IL-10, TGF-β, VEGF) that promote repigmentation and restore the melanocyte-keratinocyte network.
These stem cells are particularly rich in growth factors and anti-inflammatory molecules that stabilize the epidermal microenvironment. WJ-MSCs reduce oxidative stress-induced melanocyte apoptosis and release paracrine factors that stimulate melanin synthesis, thereby improving repigmentation in vitiliginous skin.
PLSCs provide an abundant source of multipotent stem cells with strong regenerative and anti-immunogenic characteristics. They enhance dermal angiogenesis, stimulate fibroblast support for melanocyte migration, and reduce the inflammatory cytokine cascade involved in vitiligo progression.
AFSCs secrete melanogenic factors and epidermal growth regulators that help restore pigment-producing cells. Their exosomal secretome promotes melanocyte differentiation and encourages cellular cross-talk between keratinocytes and fibroblasts for balanced skin pigmentation.
These lineage-committed precursors directly differentiate into functional melanocytes, populating depigmented areas and reestablishing pigment continuity. Combined with MSCs, MPCs facilitate durable pigmentation and resistance to immune relapse.
By combining these allogeneic stem cell sources, our Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo maximizes therapeutic outcomes while minimizing immune rejection, ensuring safe and reproducible restoration of pigmentation across diverse skin types [20-24].
Our regenerative medicine laboratory operates under stringent international standards to guarantee patient safety, cell integrity, and clinical efficacy.
All procedures are fully registered with the Thai FDA and conducted under GMP (Good Manufacturing Practice) and GLP (Good Laboratory Practice) guidelines to ensure uncompromising quality in cellular therapy preparation.
Using ISO4 and Class 10 cleanroom environments, we maintain sterile conditions during cell isolation, expansion, and cryopreservation. Advanced cell viability assays and flow cytometry confirm the immunophenotypic identity and potency of every stem cell batch.
Our protocols are supported by rigorous preclinical and clinical research demonstrating MSCs’ ability to modulate immune tolerance and regenerate melanocytes. Continuous clinical validation ensures reproducibility and long-term pigment stabilization.
We customize every protocol to the patient’s disease stage, lesion distribution, and immune status, determining the ideal stem cell type, dosage, and delivery method for maximal repigmentation response.
Stem cells are obtained from ethically approved, non-invasive sources — such as umbilical cords, placenta, and amniotic fluid — ensuring sustainability and patient safety while advancing global regenerative medicine standards.
Our unwavering dedication to innovation, precision, and ethical integrity makes our regenerative medicine facility a leader in Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo, setting a global benchmark in advanced dermatological restoration [20-24].
Clinical monitoring of treatment effectiveness involves assessing repigmentation index, melanin density, lesion contraction, and immune tolerance restoration. Our cellular therapy programs have shown:
MSCs downregulate IFN-γ, CXCL10, and TNF-α pathways, halting melanocyte destruction and reducing autoimmune infiltration within depigmented regions.
Melanocyte progenitor stem cells (MPCs), in synergy with UC-MSCs, stimulate pigment cell proliferation, migration, and integration, promoting uniform repigmentation even in long-standing lesions.
Stem cells improve epidermal stem cell signaling and extracellular matrix structure, facilitating melanocyte anchorage and preventing depigmentation relapse.
Patients report significant enhancement in self-confidence and quality of life as visible pigment restoration occurs within 3–6 months, with sustained results over time.
By addressing the root autoimmune causes and restoring cellular homeostasis, our Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo offer a transformative, evidence-based alternative to conventional therapies — providing durable pigment restoration without the long-term side effects of systemic immunosuppression [20-24].
Our team of dermatologists, immunologists, and regenerative medicine specialists thoroughly assesses each patient’s medical history and vitiligo profile to ensure maximum safety and therapeutic suitability. Not all individuals are immediate candidates for stem cell therapy due to certain systemic or dermatological contraindications.
We typically defer treatment for patients with:
Additionally, candidates must complete pre-treatment immune profiling and oxidative stress panels to tailor their cellular therapy precisely. This ensures safety, efficacy, and predictable repigmentation outcomes.
By adhering to strict eligibility guidelines, we ensure that only the most suitable candidates receive our Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo, thereby optimizing both immune tolerance induction and melanocyte survival [20-24].
For patients with long-standing or treatment-resistant vitiligo, our regenerative specialists may offer personalized protocols if clinical parameters indicate stable autoimmune status and viable dermal microenvironment. Candidates for consideration under special review must provide comprehensive diagnostics, including:
Patients must demonstrate clinical stability for at least three months and cessation of potent immunosuppressive drugs before treatment. This careful vetting ensures realistic outcomes and optimal cellular integration.
By leveraging our advanced cellular technologies, we provide innovative solutions even for patients previously considered untreatable — reigniting pigment restoration through precise regenerative intervention [20-24].
We maintain a structured international patient evaluation protocol to ensure world-class care and safety. Prospective patients must submit recent (within 3 months) medical and dermatological reports, including:
These evaluations enable precise therapeutic planning and personalized dosing strategies based on vitiligo subtype — whether segmental, generalized, or mixed-type [20-24].
Following the review of diagnostic reports, each international patient receives a comprehensive consultation outlining their regenerative treatment journey. This includes:
Our therapy integrates stem cell transplantation, exosome infusion, and adjunctive phototherapy to optimize melanocyte activation and pigment retention. Combined administration via intradermal and intravenous routes ensures both local repigmentation and systemic immune modulation.
Patients also receive follow-up protocols including skin re-pigmentation mapping, melanin density analysis, and immunologic response monitoring [20-24].
Upon qualification, patients undergo a customized 10–14-day protocol designed to achieve maximum melanocyte regeneration and immune stability. The core components include:
The cost of Cellular Therapy and Stem Cells for Vitiligo typically ranges from USD 12,000–40,000, depending on disease extent, lesion surface area, and adjunctive therapies required.
Through our DrStemCellsThailand Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine Center, we deliver one of the world’s most advanced integrative cellular therapies — restoring pigment naturally, safely, and permanently [20-24].