David M Pariser1, Jerry Bagel2, Mark Lebwohl3, Gil Yosipovitch4, Elaine Chien5, Mary C Spellman6. 1. Department of Dermatology, Eastern Virginia Medical School and Virginia Clinical Research, Inc, Norfolk, Virginia. 2. Psoriasis Treatment Center of Central New Jersey, East Windsor, New Jersey. 3. Department of Dermatology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. 4. Miami Itch Center, Department of Dermatology, University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida. 5. Independent Contractor, Palo Alto, California. 6. Menlo Therapeutics, Inc, Redwood City, California. Electronic address: mspellman@comcast.net.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pruritus, a common symptom of psoriasis, negatively affects quality of life; however, treatment of lesional skin does not consistently alleviate psoriatic itch. OBJECTIVE: To examine the effects of serlopitant, an oral, once-daily neurokinin 1 receptor antagonist, for treatment of psoriatic pruritus in a phase 2, randomized clinical trial (NCT03343639). METHODS:Patients (n = 204) were randomized to receive serlopitant, 5 mg, or placebo daily for 8 weeks. Eligible adult patients had plaque psoriasis for ≥6 months, plaques covering ≤10% of body surface area, pruritus for ≥4 weeks, and Worst Itch Numeric Rating Scale (WI-NRS) score ≥7 at the initial screening. RESULTS:Participants (54.2% women) had a mean age of 47.5 years and 85.2% were white. Mean baseline WI-NRS scores were 8.3 for serlopitant and 8.1 for placebo. The WI-NRS 4-point response rate at 8 weeks (primary end point) was 33.3% for serlopitant vs 21.1% for placebo (P = .028); at 4 weeks the rates were 20.8% for serlopitant vs 11.5% for placebo (P = .039). Treatment-related adverse events were reported for 4.9% of serlopitant-treated and 4.0% of placebo-treated patients. LIMITATIONS: This was a phase 2 study with a small study population. Patients with severe psoriasis were excluded. CONCLUSION: Serlopitant significantly reduced pruritus associated with mild to moderate psoriasis, supporting continued development of serlopitant for this patient population.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Pruritus, a common symptom of psoriasis, negatively affects quality of life; however, treatment of lesional skin does not consistently alleviate psoriatic itch. OBJECTIVE: To examine the effects of serlopitant, an oral, once-daily neurokinin 1 receptor antagonist, for treatment of psoriatic pruritus in a phase 2, randomized clinical trial (NCT03343639). METHODS:Patients (n = 204) were randomized to receive serlopitant, 5 mg, or placebo daily for 8 weeks. Eligible adult patients had plaque psoriasis for ≥6 months, plaques covering ≤10% of body surface area, pruritus for ≥4 weeks, and Worst Itch Numeric Rating Scale (WI-NRS) score ≥7 at the initial screening. RESULTS:Participants (54.2% women) had a mean age of 47.5 years and 85.2% were white. Mean baseline WI-NRS scores were 8.3 for serlopitant and 8.1 for placebo. The WI-NRS 4-point response rate at 8 weeks (primary end point) was 33.3% for serlopitant vs 21.1% for placebo (P = .028); at 4 weeks the rates were 20.8% for serlopitant vs 11.5% for placebo (P = .039). Treatment-related adverse events were reported for 4.9% of serlopitant-treated and 4.0% of placebo-treated patients. LIMITATIONS: This was a phase 2 study with a small study population. Patients with severe psoriasis were excluded. CONCLUSION:Serlopitant significantly reduced pruritus associated with mild to moderate psoriasis, supporting continued development of serlopitant for this patient population.
Authors: Di Yan; Andrew Blauvelt; Amit K Dey; Rachel S Golpanian; Samuel T Hwang; Nehal N Mehta; Bridget Myers; Zhen-Rui Shi; Gil Yosipovitch; Stacie Bell; Wilson Liao Journal: J Invest Dermatol Date: 2021-04-19 Impact factor: 7.590