Dupilumab shows long-term safety and efficacy in patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis enrolled in a phase 3 open-label extension study
Deleuran, Mette; Thaçi, Diamant; Beck, Lisa A; de Bruin-Weller, Marjolein; Blauvelt, Andrew; Forman, Seth; Bissonnette, Robert; Reich, Kristian; Soong, Weily; Hussain, Iftikhar; Foley, Peter; Hide, Michihiro; Bouaziz, Jean-David; Gelfand, Joel M; Sher, Lawrence; Schuttelaar, Marie L A; Wang, Chen; Chen, Zhen; Akinlade, Bolanle; Gadkari, Abhijit; Eckert, Laurent; Davis, John D; Rajadhyaksha, Manoj; Staudinger, Heribert; Graham, Neil M H; Pirozzi, Gianluca; Ardeleanu, Marius
(2020) Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, volume 82, issue 2, pp. 377 - 388
(Article)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Significant unmet need exists for long-term treatment of moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD). OBJECTIVE: To assess the long-term safety and efficacy of dupilumab in patients with AD. METHODS: This ongoing, multicenter, open-label extension study (NCT01949311) evaluated long-term dupilumab treatment in adults who had previously participated in phase 1
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through 3 clinical trials of dupilumab for AD. This analysis examined patients given 300 mg dupilumab weekly for up to 76 weeks at data cutoff (April 2016). Safety was the primary outcome; efficacy was also evaluated. RESULTS: Of 1491 enrolled patients (1042.9 patient-years), 92.9% were receiving treatment at cutoff. The safety profile was consistent with previously reported trials (420.4 adverse events/100 patient-years and 8.5 serious adverse events/100 patient-years), with no new safety signals; common adverse events included nasopharyngitis, conjunctivitis, and injection-site reactions. Sustained improvement was seen up to 76 weeks in all efficacy outcomes, including measures of skin inflammation, pruritus, and quality of life. LIMITATIONS: Lack of control arm, limited number of patients with 76 weeks or longer of treatment (median follow-up, 24 weeks), and patients not receiving the approved dose regimen of 300 mg every 2 weeks. CONCLUSION: The safety and efficacy profile from this study supports the role of dupilumab as continuous long-term treatment for patients with moderate to severe AD.
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Keywords: IL-13, IL-4, atopic dermatitis, biologic therapy, dupilumab, efficacy, long-term, monoclonal antibody, open label, quality of life, safety, Dermatology
ISSN: 0190-9622
Publisher: Mosby Inc.
Note: Publisher Copyright: © 2019 American Academy of Dermatology, Inc.
(Peer reviewed)