| Literature DB >> 27504249 |
Kashif Siddiqui1, Linda Stein Gold2, Japinder Gill1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rosacea is a common chronic skin condition that manifests as recurrent inflammatory lesions. Long-term treatment is required to control symptoms and disease progression, with topical treatments being the first-line choice. Ivermectin 1 % cream is a new once-daily (QD) topical treatment for the inflammatory lesions of rosacea, and it is important to compare the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of ivermectin with other currently available topical treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Ivermectin; Papulopustular; Rosacea; Topical
Year: 2016 PMID: 27504249 PMCID: PMC4956638 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-2819-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Flow diagram for the systematic review of the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of ivermectin 1 % cream QD compared with current topical treatments for the inflammatory lesions of rosacea. CSR clinical study report, Embase Excerpta Medica Database, MEDLINE Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online, n number.
*Source: van Zuuren et al. (2011)
Study details for the RCTs included in the quantitative analyses of the efficacy and safety of topical treatments for moderate-to-severe papulopustular rosacea
| Study name/publication | Design | Duration (weeks) | Intervention (n) | Analysis outcomes | Author conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18170 Study (Gold et al. | R, DB, AP, | 56 | Ivermectin 1 % cream QD (451) | Inflammatory lesion count | Ivermectin 1 % cream QD was well-tolerated and safe for papulopustular rosacea, in particular, no notable difference was found between the ivermectin 1 % cream QD and azelaic acid 15 % gel BID. Ivermectin 1 % cream QD resulted in fewer skin-related AEs than with azelaic acid 15 % gel BID and vehicle |
| 18171 study (Gold et al. | R, DB, AP, | 56 | Ivermectin 1 % cream QD (459) | Inflammatory lesion count | Ivermectin 1 % cream QD was well-tolerated and safe, with less frequent AEs and a statistically significantly greater success rate at 12 weeks compared to azelaic acid 15 % gel BID when used to treat moderate-to-severe papulopustular rosacea |
| Beutner and Calverese ( | R, IB, AP, MC, PU | 10 | MET 1 % cream QD (553) | Success rate | Metronidazole gel 1 % QD had a higher efficacy rate than its cream formulation and its vehicle and was equally well-tolerated for the treatment of rosacea |
| Bjerke et al. ( | R, DB, PC, MC, PU | 13 | Azelaic acid 20 % cream BID (76) | Specific AEs: burning/stinging, skin irritation | Azelaic acid 20 % cream BID was effective and well-tolerated with a significantly greater reduction inflammatory lesion count compared to vehicle for the treatment of papulopustular rosacea |
| Draelos et al. ( | R, DB, PC, MC, PU | 16 | Azelaic acid 15 % foam BID (198) | Inflammatory lesion count | Azelaic acid 15 % foam BID demonstrated a significant advantage over the vehicle in both primary measures of efficacy: therapeutic success rate (p = 0.017) and change in inflammatory lesion count (p = 0.001) for the treatment of papulopustular rosacea |
| Draelos et al. ( | R, DB, PC, MC, Phase III | 16 | Azelaic acid 15 % foam BID (484) | Inflammatory lesion count | This study supported the efficacy and safety of azelaic acid foam in patients with papulopustular rosacea. Azelaic acid 15 % foam demonstrated a statistically significant advantage over vehicle in both primary measures of efficacy success rate and change in inflammatory lesion count |
| Elewski et al. ( | R, IB, AC, MC, PU | 15 | Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID (124) | Inflammatory lesion count | Use of azelaic acid 15 % gel for 15 weeks demonstrated significant superiority over using MET 0.75 % gel in improving principal signs of rosacea (inflammatory lesions and erythema) |
| Fowler ( | R, DB, PC, MC, PU | 16 | MET 1 % gel BID + Vehicle followed by Vehicle (36) | Inflammatory lesion count | Combination anti-inflammatory dose DOX and MET 1 % gel resulted in a faster reduction of inflammatory lesion count, when calculated at all interim and final data analysis. Anti-inflammatory dose DOX sustained the reduction in lesion count through 16 weeks in patients with mild-to-moderate rosacea |
| Koca et al. ( | R, OL, AC, SC, PU | 12 | MET 1 % cream bid (24) | All cause withdrawals | PIM 1 % cream was equally effective in reducing inflammatory lesion count as MET 1 % cream in the treatment of papulopustular rosacea |
| Leyden ( | R, DB, AP, MC, Phase II | 12 | Silica encapsulated benzoyl peroxide 1 % gel QD (32) | Success rate | Silica encapsulated benzoyl peroxide 1 % and 5 % gels were superior to vehicle in reducing papulopustular lesions |
| NCT00617903 ( | R, DB, PC, MC, Phase II | 12 | Azelaic acid 15 % foam BID (41) | Inflammatory lesion count | Authors’ conclusions about the study drug could not be ascertained from the NCT ID from where the trial data were extracted, no publication for the trial could be retrieved |
| RD.03.SRE.40027 (Galderma | R, IB, AP, | 12 | Ivermectin 0.1 % cream QD (51) | Inflammatory lesion count | Both ivermectin 1 % cream QD and BID were effective and safe, with similar efficacy results between the two dosages. Compliance was enhanced by the ivermectin 1 % QD application for the treatment of papulopustular rosacea |
| RD.03.SPR.40173 (ATTRACT) (Galderma | R, IB, AC, | 52 | Ivermectin 1 % cream QD (478) | Inflammatory lesion count | Ivermectin 1 % cream resulted in a statistically significant delayed and extended remission when compared to MET 0.75 % cream when used to treat papulopustular rosacea |
| Tan et al. ( | R, DB, PC, MC, PU | 12 | MET 1 % cream BID (61) | Inflammatory lesion count | The combined topical formulation of MET 1 % cream with sunscreen SPF 15 was effective and well tolerated for the treatment of patients with moderate-to-severe rosacea |
| Thiboutot et al. ( | R, DB, PC, MC, Phase III | 12 | Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID (164) | Inflammatory lesion count | The results of these two controlled studies demonstrate that azelaic acid 15 % gel, used twice daily, is an efficacious, safe, and well-tolerated topical treatment for moderate papulopustular rosacea |
| Thiboutot et al. ( | R, DB, PC, MC, Phase III | 12 | Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID (169) | Inflammatory lesion count | |
| Thiboutot et al. ( | R, DB, DR, MC, PU | 12 | Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID (47) | Inflammatory lesion count | Once-daily azelaic acid 15 % gel can be utilized as a safe, effective, and economical dosing option for the treatment of mild-to-moderate papulopustular rosacea. Once-daily dosing of azelaic acid 15 % gel was well accepted by patients and can offer considerable dosing flexibility and convenience for the patient as well as for the dermatologist |
| Torok et al. ( | R, DB, AC, MC, PU | 12 | Sodium sulfacetamide 10 % cream BID + sulfur 5 % cream BID (75) | Inflammatory lesion count | In patients without sulfur drug allergies, sodium sulfacetamide 10 % and sulfur 5 % cream with sunscreen offers greater efficacy than MET 0.75 % cream and has the added benefit of sun protection |
| Wolf et al. ( | R, IB, AC, MC, PU | 15 | Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID (78) | Success rate | MET 1 % gel and azelaic acid 15 % gel showed similar reductions in inflammatory lesion count and high success rates in both global severity and erythema in patients with moderate rosacea |
AC active-controlled, AE adverse events, AP active- and placebo/vehicle-controlled, BID twice daily, DB double-blind, DOX doxycycline, DR dose ranging, IB investigator blind, MC multicenter, MC-I multicenter international, MET metronidazole, N number of patients, PC placebo/vehicle-controlled, PIM pimecrolimus, PU phase unclear, QD once-daily, R randomized, SAE serious adverse event, SPF sun protection factor, TRAE treatment-related adverse event
Fig. 2Network diagram for success rate (a) and percentage change in inflammatory lesion count (b) at 12 weeks. AZA azelaic acid, bid twice daily, DOX doxycycline, IVE ivermectin, MET metronidazole, OD once daily. Note: network diagrams for other timepoints are available in the Additional file 1
Results of an MTC of success rate for ivermectin 1 % cream QD versus other available topical treatments and vehicle at 12 weeks
| Comparator treatment | 12 weeks |
|---|---|
| RR (95 % Crl) (vs. ivermectin 1 % cream QD) | |
| Azelaic acid 15 % gel QD | 1.33 (0.99 to 2.20) |
| Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID |
|
| Metronidazole 0.75 % cream BID |
|
| Metronidazole 1 % gel QD | 1.18 (0.98 to 1.56) |
| Silica encapsulated benzoyl peroxide 1 % gel QD | 1.09 (0.86 to 1.78) |
| Silica encapsulated benzoyl peroxide 5 % gel QD | 0.94 (0.81 to 1.29) |
| Vehicle |
|
| NNT (95 % Crl) (vs. vehicle) | |
| Azelaic acid 15 % gel QD | 7 (−120 to 120) |
| Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID |
|
| Metronidazole 0.75 % cream BID |
|
| Metronidazole 1 % gel QD |
|
| Silica encapsulated benzoyl peroxide 1 % gel QD | 4 (−31 to 44) |
| Silica encapsulated benzoyl peroxide 5 % gel QD |
|
| Ivermectin 1 % cream QD |
|
Risk ratios evaluate the probability of success (relieving rosacea) when using ivermectin 1 % cream QD, compared to other comparator treatments. A risk ratio >1 demonstrates a greater likelihood of success using ivermectin 1 % cream QD, a RR Crl that does not cross 1 demonstrates a significant difference between ivermectin and the comparator (positive values indicate superiority, negative values indicate inferiority) (indicated in italic). Lower estimates of NNT indicate a greater likelihood of patients achieving success with ivermectin 1 % cream QD, as fewer patients need to be treated to achieve one success than with the comparator treatment. A positive Crl indicates a significantly greater likelihood of patients achieving success when using ivermectin 1 % cream QD than when using the comparator (indicated in italic). Studies contributing to 12 week analysis: Galderma (2006, 2014), Thiboutot et al. (2008), Wolf et al. (2006), NCT00617903 (2013), Draelos et al. (2013, 2015), Stein et al. (2014), Thiboutot et al. (2003), Leyden (2014), Gold et al. (2014a); 3, 9, and 15 weeks results available in Additional file 1: Table 7. MTC results are derived from a fixed effects model. At 15 weeks, ivermectin vs. vehicle data were limited, and so metronidazole 0.75 % BID was used as the bridging comparator for NNT
BID twice daily, Crl credible interval, MTC mixed treatment comparison, NNT number needed-to-treat, QD once daily, RR risk ratio
Results of an MTC of percentage change in inflammatory lesion count between ivermectin 1 % cream QD and comparators at 12 weeks
| Comparator treatment | 12 weeks (Absolute difference, 95 % Crl) |
|---|---|
| Azelaic acid 15 % gel QD |
|
| Azelaic acid 15 % gel BID |
|
| Metronidazole 0.75 % cream BID |
|
| Metronidazole 1 % gel BID | 18.11 (−3.63 to 39.95) |
| Metronidazole 1 % gel BID + doxycycline 40 mg QD | −0.04 (−25.21 to 25.65) |
| Sodium sulfacetamide 10 % + sulfur 5 % cream BID | −1.68 (−10.21 to 6.85) |
| Vehicle |
|
Negative values indicate a greater percentage reduction in the inflammatory lesion count with ivermectin 1 % cream QD than with the comparator. A negative Crl that does not cross 0 indicates a significantly higher likelihood of patients using ivermectin 1 % cream QD experiencing a greater reduction in inflammatory lesion count (significant differences between treatments indicated in italic). Studies contributing to 12 week analysis: Stein et al. (2014), Gold et al. (2014a), Galderma (2006, 2014), Torok et al. (2005), Elewski et al. (2003), Thiboutot et al. (2003, 2008), NCT00617903 (2013), Draelos et al. (2013, 2015), Tan et al. (2002), Fowler (2007a); 3 week and 9 week results available in Additional file 1: Table 8. MTC results are derived from a fixed effects model
BID twice daily, Crl credible interval, MTC mixed treatment comparison, QD once daily
Fig. 3Network diagrams for incidence of any adverse events (a), any serious adverse events (b), and any treatment-related adverse events (c) at 12 weeks. AZA azelaic acid, bid twice daily, IVE ivermectin, MET metronidazole, OD once daily. Note: network diagrams for the incidence of burning/stinging, skin irritation, worsening of erythema, and worsening of rosacea at 12 weeks are available in the Additional file 1
Fig. 4Results of MTC analyses between ivermectin 1 % cream QD and comparators for the incidence of any adverse events (top), serious adverse events (middle), and treatment-related adverse events (bottom) at 12 weeks. Risk ratios evaluate the probability of success (relieving rosacea) when using ivermectin 1 % cream QD, compared to other comparator treatments. A risk ratio >1 demonstrates a greater likelihood of success using ivermectin 1 % cream QD, a risk ratio credible interval that does not cross 1 demonstrates a significant difference between ivermectin 1 % cream QD and the comparator (positive values indicate superiority, negative values indicate inferiority). The comparison of ivermectin 1 % cream QD demonstrated significantly better results compared with azelaic acid 15 % gel/foam BID for any adverse events and with vehicle and azelaic acid 15 % gel/foam BID for any treatment-related adverse events. No comparator demonstrated significantly better results compared with ivermectin 1 % cream QD. Studies contributing to any adverse events: nine studies (Gold et al. 2014a; Stein et al. 2014; Galderma 2006; Tan et al. 2002; Thiboutot et al. 2003, 2008; Torok et al. 2005; NCT00617903 2013), any serious adverse events: four studies (Gold et al. 2014a, b; Galderma 2006; Draelos et al. 2015), any treatment-related adverse events: seven studies (Gold et al. 2014a; Stein et al. 2014; Galderma 2006; Tan et al. 2002; Thiboutot et al. 2008; Torok et al. 2005; Draelos et al. 2013). MTC results are derived from a fixed effects model. AZA azelaic acid, bid twice daily, Crl credible interval, MET metronidazole, MTC mixed treatment comparison, QD once daily, RR risk ratio
Fig. 5Results of MTC analyses between ivermectin 1 % cream QD and comparators for the incidence of specific adverse events at 12 weeks [burning/stinging (A), skin irritation (B), worsening or erythema (C), and worsening of rosacea (D)]. Risk ratios evaluate the probability of success (relieving rosacea) when using ivermectin 1 % cream QD, compared to other comparator treatments. A risk ratio >1 demonstrates a greater likelihood of success using ivermectin 1 % cream QD, a RR Crl that does not cross 1 demonstrates a significant difference between ivermectin 1 % cream QD and the comparator (positive values indicate superiority, negative values indicate inferiority). Studies contributing to A: six studies (Gold et al. 2014a; Stein et al. 2014; Tan et al. 2002; Galderma 2006; Bjerke et al. 1999; Draelos et al. 2013), B: four studies (Gold et al. 2014a; Stein et al. 2014; Galderma 2006; Bjerke et al. 1999), C: four studies (Tan et al. 2002; Galderma 2006; NCT00617903 2013; Draelos et al. 2013), D: four studies (Gold et al. 2014a; Galderma 2006; NCT00617903 2013; Draelos et al. 2013). MTC results are derived from a fixed effects model. AZA azelaic acid, bid twice daily, Crl credible interval, MET metronidazole, MTC mixed treatment comparison, QD once daily, RR risk ratio