| Literature DB >> 23549982 |
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is an inflammatory skin disease commonly affecting children and managed by pediatricians, primary care physicians, allergists, and dermatologists alike. For many years, the only available topical pharmacological treatment was topical corticosteroids. This changed in 2000-2001, when topical formulations of two calcineurin inhibitors (tacrolimus and pimecrolimus) were approved for short-term or chronic intermittent treatment of AD in patients ≥ 2 years of age, in whom other treatments have been ineffective or contraindicated. These topical calcineurin inhibitors (TCIs) quickly became a popular treatment option due at least in part to concerns over adverse events associated with prolonged topical corticosteroid use, especially in children. However, based on theoretical concerns about a possible risk of lymphoma associated with TCI use, a Boxed Warning was placed on both products in 2006. Since then, despite an extensive body of evidence, no causal relationship has been demonstrated between TCI use and an increased risk of lymphoma; however, the US FDA has concluded that a link cannot be ruled out. In fact, based on post-marketing surveillance of spontaneous, literature, and solicited reports, we report here that the lymphoma incidence in the topical pimecrolimus-exposed population is up to approximately 54-fold less than that seen in the general US population. This review summarizes the mechanism of action of TCIs, the factors that prompted the Boxed Warning, and recent TCI safety and efficacy data. Based on these data, both topical corticosteroids and TCIs should have defined roles in AD management, with TCIs favored for sensitive skin areas (e.g., face) and instances where topical corticosteroids have proven ineffective, thereby minimizing the risk of adverse effects with both drug classes.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23549982 PMCID: PMC3715696 DOI: 10.1007/s40272-013-0013-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Paediatr Drugs ISSN: 1174-5878 Impact factor: 3.022
Fig. 1The mechanism of atopic dermatitis and sites of action of topical calcineurin inhibitors and topical corticosteroids. GMC-SF granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, IFNγ interferon γ, IL interleukin, IgE immunoglobulin E, TCI topical calcineurin inhibitor, TGF-β tumor growth factor- β, Th helper T lymphocyte
Comparative efficacy and tolerability between topical calcineurin inhibitors and topical corticosteroidsa
| Methodology | Tolerability results | Efficacy results | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tacrolimus vs. | Pimecrolimus vs. | ||||||||
| Vehicle | Mild CS | Mid-CS | Potent CS | Vehicle | Mild CS | Mid-CS | Potent CS | ||
| Meta-analysis of studies comparing tacrolimus and pimecrolimus with each other, topical corticosteroids, or vehicle in patients with AD of any age ( | • Both TCIs are well tolerated | > | > | > | < | ||||
| Meta-analysis of randomized trials of TCIs compared with topical corticosteroids or vehicle in patients of any age with AD ( | • Skin burning is more frequent with both TCIs than topical corticosteroids • Neither TCI is associated with risk of skin infection compared with vehicle or topical corticosteroids | > | > | = | > | b | < | ||
| Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials comparing tacrolimus with pimecrolimus, topical corticosteroids, or vehicle in children with AD ( | • Tacrolimus is similar in tolerability to vehicle and pimecrolimus, but greater in tolerability than 1 % HCT • Burning and pruritus are among the most frequent adverse events | > | > | ||||||
| Systematic review of randomized controlled trials of TCIs compared with topical corticosteroids or vehicle in patients of any age with AD ( | > | > | = | > | = | < | |||
| Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of TCIs compared with topical corticosteroids or vehicle in children with AD ( | • Both TCIs have tolerability profiles similar to vehicle | > | >c | >d | |||||
| Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of tacrolimus compared with topical corticosteroids in children ( | • Tacrolimus and topical corticosteroids are similar in tolerability, with the exception of skin burning | > | > | = | |||||
AD atopic dermatitis, CS corticosteroid, HCT hydrocortisone, TCI topical calcineurin inhibitor
> indicates more effective, < indicates less effective, = indicates as effective
aAs identified using PubMed searches for peer-reviewed systematic reviews or meta-analyses comparing the efficacy and/or tolerability of tacrolimus and/or pimecrolimus with topical corticosteroids in patients with atopic eczema [ie, topical and (tacrolimus or pimecrolimus or calcineurin) and (corticosteroids or halobetasol or diflorasone or desoximetasone or clocortolone or triamcinolone or betamethasone or hydrocortisone or clobetasol or fluocinonide or fluocinolone or mometasone or fluticasone or alclometasone or prednicarbate or desonide) and (eczema or “atopic dermatitis”), limited to systematic review/meta-analysis publication type, human species, and English language]
bComparisons not available or limited
cApplied to face, neck, and intertriginous areas
dApplied to trunk and limbs
Epidemiological studies of topical calcineurin inhibitor use and malignancy risk (including lymphoma)a
| Database | Design and population | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Survey of dermatology outpatients with AD | Nested case-controlled cohort of 3,535 patients >30 years of age | • No association between TCI use and increased risk of non-melanoma skin cancer [ |
| US PharMetrics Health Claims Database | Nested case-controlled cohort of 293,253 patients of any age with AD | • No increased risk of lymphoma in TCI-treated patients compared with non-use [ • Severity of AD was the main factor associated with increased risk of lymphoma [ • 9 of 81 patients <20 years of age who developed lymphoma had TCI exposure—4 to tacrolimus, 4 to pimecrolimus, and 1 to both [ |
| US PharMetrics Health Claims Database (extension of previous) | Nested case-controlled cohort of 625,915 patients of any age with AD | • No increased risk of overall lymphoma in TCI- or topical corticosteroid-treated patients compared with non-use; results were similar for patients <20 years of age [ • Possible significantly higher risk of non-Hodgkin’s and T-cell lymphoma in patients treated with tacrolimus (but not pimecrolimus) compared with non-use [ |
| The Health Improvement Network (THIN) Electronic Medical Record Database | Nested case-control study of 3,500,194 patients <80 years of age who used TCIs or topical corticosteroids | • No association between TCI use and lymphoma riskb [ • Significant correlation between topical corticosteroid use and risk of lymphoma, especially skin lymphoma [ |
| Kaiser Permanente California Databases | Cohort of 953,064 patients of any age with AD | • No association between TCI use and risk of malignancy [ • Possible association between risk of CTCL and exposure to tacrolimus (but not pimecrolimus) [ • 1 of 12 patients with a confirmed diagnosis of lymphoma was ≤20 years of age (this patient was exposed to both TCIs) [ |
| United Health Care Health Claims Database | Propensity-matched cohort of 1,200,645 patients of any age including: • Patients with AD who initiated pimecrolimus, tacrolimus, or medium/potent topical corticosteroids • Patients with AD who did not initiate AD treatment • Controls without AD who had no TCI/topical corticosteroid exposure | • No increased risk of lymphoma (including CTCL) with initiation of pimecrolimus compared with initiation of tacrolimus or medium/potent topical corticosteroids [ • Of patients ≤5 years of age: ○ None had a diagnosis of lymphoma during the 6-month period following the index date [ ○ Two had a diagnosis of lymphoma overall (one patient with CTCL and one with “any lymphoma”; both were exposed to tacrolimus) [ |
AD atopic dermatitis, CTCL cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, TCI topical calcineurin inhibitor
aAs identified in the FDA’s calcineurin inhibitor pediatric literature review [37, 38]
bThe low number of TCI-treated patients made the determination of a link impossible