| Literature DB >> 21760743 |
Ashley N Feneran1, William S Kaufman, Tushar S Dabade, Steven R Feldman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acne vulgaris is a chronic disease with several pathogenic factors. Multiple medications are typically used that can lead to nonadherence and treatment failure. Combination medications target multiple pathways of acne formation and may offer therapeutic benefit.Entities:
Keywords: adherence; efficacy; erythromycin; safety; tolerability
Year: 2011 PMID: 21760743 PMCID: PMC3133504 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S13873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Figure 1Sebaceous gland of normal skin.
Source: Graham Library of Digital Images, Wake Forest University Department of Dermatology. © 2009 Wake Forest University Dermatology.
Figure 2Sebaceous gland of a young adult.
Source: Graham Library of Digital Images, Wake Forest University Department of Dermatology. © 2009 Wake Forest University Dermatology.
Figure 3Acne vulgaris, comedone. (Cx7).
Source: Graham Library of Digital Images, Wake Forest University Department of Dermatology. © 2009 Wake Forest University Dermatology.
Summary of investigations comparing CTG combination therapy to monotherapy of clindamycin, tretinoin, or vehicle
| Rietschel and Duncan | Clindamycin 1% plus tretinoin 0.025% vs monotherapy of clindamycin or tretinoin | Double-blind, randomized | 8 weeks | 64 | Similar efficacy amongst tretinoin plus clindamycin, tretinoin alone, and clindamycin alone; all arms of the study were well-tolerated | Dryness and peeling worse with tretinoin alone; burning and erythema not significantly different between combination of drugs and tretinoin; clindamycin alone had least AEs | Absorption of cindamycin phosphate was not detected at 2 and 8 weeks; combination therapy had fewer subjective complaints |
| Leyden et al | CTG vs monotherapy of clindamycin or tretinoin or vehicle | Two randomized, double-blind, multicenter, active drug- and vehicle-controlled | 12 weeks | 2219 | CTG group showed superior efficacy in treating inflammatory and noninflammatory lesions compared with monotherapy or vehicle alone | Well-tolerated overall; 87.6% of participants reporting no AEs | Study conclusions may not represent predominantly inflammatory or nodulocystic acne; most subjects had noninflammatory acne |
| Yentzer et al | CTG vs application of two separate generic subcomponents | Single-blind, prospective, single center, randomized, controlled trial | 12 weeks | 21 | CTG group had significant reduction in total lesions over length of study; both groups improved mild to moderate acne | Treatment was well-tolerated in both groups | Adherence of CTG product exceeded that of using two separate medications |
| Richter et al | CTG vs 0.025% tretinoin gel | Randomized, double-blind, multicenter | 12 weeks | 152 | CTG was superior to tretinoin in papular and inflammatory acne lesions and in overall acne severity | Less burning reported with CTG | CTG onset of action was faster than tretinoin |
| Zouboulis et al | CTG vs clindamycin lotion | Multicenter, single-blind, randomized, comparative | 12 weeks | 206 | CTG was more effective at reducing acne lesions than clindamycin monotherapy | More erythema and desquamation reported with CTG | CTG had faster onset of action than clindamycin monotherapy |
Abbreviations: AE, adverse effect; CTG, clinamycin 1.0%–1.2%-tretinoin 0.025% combination gel.
AEs occurring in at least 1% of subjects at the end of 12-week study39,40
| Patients with at least 1 AE | 497 (27) | 342 (24) | 225 (27) | 91 (22) |
| Nasopharyngitis | 65 (4) | 64 (5) | 16 (2) | 5 (1) |
| Pharyngolaryngeal pain | 29 (2) | 18 (1) | 5 (1) | 7 (2) |
| Dry skin | 23 (1) | 7 (1) | 3 (<1) | 0 (0) |
| Cough | 19 (1) | 21 (2) | 9 (1) | 2 (1) |
| Sinusitis | 19 (1) | 19 (1) | 15 (2) | 4 (1) |
Abbreviations: AE, adverse effect; CTG, clinamycin 1.0%–1.2%-tretinoin 0.025% combination gel.
Local skin reactions reported with CTG39,40
| Erythema | 636 (35) | 416 (26) |
| Scaling | 237 (13) | 280 (17) |
| Itching | 189 (10) | 70 (4) |
| Burning | 38 (2) | 56 (4) |
| Stinging | 33 (2) | 27 (2) |
Abbreviation: CTG, clinamycin 1.0%–1.2%-tretinoin 0.025% combination gel.
Summary of comparative investigations of BPO/clin or BPO/erythro combination therapies vs monotherapy of either drug’s constituents and vehicle
| Lookingbill et al | BPO/clin (5%/1%) vs monotherapy of BPO (5%) or clin (1%) or vehicle | Two double-blind, randomized, parallel, controlled | 11 weeks | 334 | BPO/clin showed greater efficacy than monotherapy of BPO, clin, or vehicle | Excellent overall tolerance reported in 95% of patients; no difference in AEs in active drug arms | Concluded that combination BPO/clin is superior to either drug alone |
| Leyden et al | BPO/clin (5%/1%) vs monotherapy of BPO (5%) or clin (1%) or vehicle | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind | 10 weeks | 480 | BPO/clin more effective than monotherapy of BPO, clin, or vehicle | Similar AEs in all arms of study; most common AE was skin dryness | Concluded combination BPO/clin as an alternative treatment for moderate to moderately severe acne |
| Leyden et al | BPO/clin (5%/1%) vs BPO (5%) or BPO/erythro (5%/3%) | Randomized, multicenter, single-blind | 10 weeks | 492 | BPO/clin showed greater reduction than BPO in inflammatory lesions and was not more efficacious than BPO/erythro | AEs similar in all arms; dry skin most frequently reported in all arms | Concluded BPO/clin combination more effective than BPO alone and at least as effective as BPO/erythro |
| Tschen et al | BPO/clin (5%/1%) vs BPO (5%) vs clin (1%) vs vehicle | Randomized, multicenter, double-blind, parallel-group | 10 weeks | 278 | BPO/clin reduced inflammatory lesions more than either drug alone; BPO/clin reduced comedones more than clin or vehicle | Dry skin most frequent AE overall and more common in BPO/clin and BPO | Concluded BPO/clin more effective than monotherapy of either drug, especially for inflammatory acne |
| Thiboutot et al | BPO/clin (2.5%/1.2%) vs BPO (2.5%) vs clin (1.2%) vs vehicle | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, active- and vehicle-controlled, parallel-group, comparative | 12 weeks | 2813 | BPO/clin was more effective at treating both noninflammatory and inflammatory lesions than either drug alone or vehicle | BPO/clin preparation was well-tolerated, and the AEs reported were reported as mild to moderate | BPO/clin is a safe, effective, and well-tolerated agent for the treatment of moderate to severe acne |
| Cunliffe et al | BPO/clin (5%/1%) vs clin 1% gel | Double-blind, randomized, parallel-group | 16 weeks | 70 | BPO/clin reduced number of | Both preparations were well-tolerated | Decreasing |
| Chalker et al | BPO/erythro (5%/3%) vs BPO (5%) vs erythro (3%) vs vehicle | Double-blind, controlled | 10 weeks | 165 | BPO-containing products reduced comedones more effectively than erythro alone; reduced pustules, papules, and inflammatory lesions | No AEs reported | BPO/erythro more effective than either drug alone, especially for inflammatory lesions |
Abbreviations: AE, adverse effect; BPO, benzoyl peroxide; BPO/clin, benzoyl peroxide/clindamycin phosphate combination medication; BPO/erythro, benzoyl peroxide/erythromycin combination medication; clin, clindamycin phosphate; erythro, erythromycin.
Summary of comparative investigations of adapalene-BPO combination therapies vs monotherapy of each and vehicle
| Poulin et al | Adapalene-BPO vs vehicle | Multicenter, double-blind, randomized, controlled | 12 weeks | 243 | Significantly higher lesion maintenance success rate for inflammatory and noninflammatory lesions with adapalene-BPO vs vehicle | Adapalene-BPO was safe and well-tolerated | Adapalene-BPO prevents the relapse in severe acne and continues to reduce lesion counts over 6 months |
| Troielli et al | Adapalene-BPO | Open-label, community-based, multicenter, interventional | 12 weeks | 105 | Adapalene-BPO use significantly decreased inflammatory and noninflammatory lesions | Good local tolerability | Adapalene-BPO has good efficacy and tolerability in routine practice |
| Gold et al | Adapalene-BPO vs monotherapy of either drug alone and gel vehicle | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, active- and vehicle-controlled | 12 weeks | 1429 | Adapalene-BPO showed higher success rate and reduction of acne lesions than other groups | comparable safety of adapalene-BPO to monotherapies and gel vehicle | Large clinical trial demonstrates fixed-dose combination therapy to be superior in efficacy with an early onset of efficacy |
| Gollnick et al | Adapalene-BPO vs monotherapy of either drug alone and gel vehicle | Randomized, double-blind, controlled | 12 weeks | 1670 | Adapalene-BPO showed significantly greater efficacy than monotherapies | Well-tolerated, with comparable tolerability to a dapalene monotherapy | Adapalene-BPO use results in significantly greater and synergistic results in the treatment of acne vulgaris compared with monotherapies |
| Loesche et al | Adapalene-BPO vs monotherapy of either drug alone and gel vehicle | Single center, controlled, randomized, investigator-blinded intra-individual | 3 weeks | 24 | Study analyzed tolerability only; no significant difference in irritation indices for adapalene-BPO vs monotherapies | Adapalene-BPO is as well-tolerated as either monotherapy in relation to irritancy | |
| Andres et al | Adapalene-BPO vs BPO 2.5%; adapalene-BPO vs BPO 5%; adapalene 0.1%-BPO 5% combination vs BPO 5%; and adapalene 0.1%-BPO 5% combination vs BPO 10% | Randomized, controlled, investigator-blinded, single-center, bilateral (split-face), dose-assessment | 3 weeks | 60 | Study analyzed tolerability only; better tolerability profile of adapalene 0.1%-BPO 2.5% than adapalene 0.1%-BPO 5%; similar to either BPO 2.5% or 5% monotherapy; adapalene 0.1%-BPO 5% caused more irritation than BPO 5% or 10% monotherapy | Adapalene 0.1%-BPO 2.5% combination product had best tolerability profile compared with BPO monotherapy | |
| Thiboutot et al | Adapalene-BPO vs monotherapy of either drug alone and gel vehicle | Randomized, double-blind, controlled | 12 weeks | 517 | Adapalene-BPO significantly more effective than monotherapies with significant reduction in lesion counts at 1 week | Similar adverse event frequency and tolerability profile for combination gel vs adapalene monotherapy | Adapalene-BPO use results in significantly greater efficacy for treatment of acne vulgaris compared to monotherapies and a similar tolerability profile to adapalene monotherapy |
Abbreviations: adapalene-BPO, adapalene 0.1%/benzoyl peroxide 2.5% combination gel; BPO, benzoyl peroxide.