| Literature DB >> 32519223 |
Megan Newsom1, Arjun M Bashyam2, Esther A Balogh2, Steven R Feldman2,3,4,5, Lindsay C Strowd2.
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a prevalent inflammatory skin condition that, depending on its severity, can cause enormous morbidity. Corticosteroids and systemic immunosuppression, traditionally standard of care for difficult-to-treat disease, have many undesirable side effects. The desire for targeted treatments along with an improved understanding of the pathophysiology of AD has spurred the development of novel treatments. In this article, we review promising new treatments and discuss how their targets-IL-13, IL-31, OX40 (CD134), and the Janus kinase family of proteins-participate in the pathogenesis of AD. We review the published phase II and III data for dupilumab, tralokinumab, lebrikizumab, nemolizumab, anti-OX40 antibody, baricitinib, abrocitinib, and upadacitinib. The introduction of new agents may offer new options, but it remains to be seen how narrow-acting agents, like single interleukin inhibitors, will compare in safety and efficacy to broad-acting agents such as JAK inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32519223 PMCID: PMC7281689 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-020-01335-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Fig. 1IL-4 and IL-13 signaling pathways via JAK-STAT signaling cascade. Created with biorender.com. IL interleukin, JAK Janus kinase, TYK2 tyrosine kinase 2, STAT signal transducer and activator of transcription
Efficacy and safety of published phase II and III clinical trials
| Study | Efficacy | Concomitant corticosteroids | Safety | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IGA 0/1 plus ≥ 2-point improvement from baseline | EASI-75 | IGA 0/1 | Other primary outcome measure | |||
| IL-4Rα antagonists | ||||||
| Dupilumab | ||||||
| Adult phase III: SOLO-1 [ | At week 16a: 38%b (q2w) and 37%b (q1w) improved vs placebo (10%) | At week 16: 51%b (q2w) and 52%b (q1w) improved vs placebo (15%) | TCSd and systemic CSd | ↑ rate of idiopathic and allergic conjunctivitis in treatment groups vs placebo, ↑ in eosinophils in dupilumab group that resolved by week 16, worsening AD = only serious AE reported in 2 + subjects | ||
| Adult phase III: SOLO-2 [ | At week 16 | At week 16: 44%b (q2w) and 48%b (q1w) improved vs placebo (12%) | ||||
| Phase III open-label extension in adults [ | At week 76: 58.0% of subjects improved from baseline of the parent studyc | At week 76: 88.4% of subjects improved from baseline of the parent studyc | At week 76 | TCS | Most common TEAEs: upper respiratory infection, worsening AD, nasopharyngitis, and headache; serious AEs occurred in 7 subjects: lymphoma, prostate cancer, colitis, eczema herpeticum, serum sickness, herpes ophthalmic, worsening AD, and seizure | |
| Adult phase III: LIBERTY AD CAFÉ [ | At week 16: 39.1%b (q1w) and 40.2%b (q2w) improved vs placebo (13.9%) | At week 16 | Medium potency TCS (weeks 2–16) and systemic CSd | No serious TEAEs attributed to dupilumab, ↑ rate of conjunctivitis and injection reaction in treatment group vs placebo | ||
| Adolescent phase III [ | At week 16 | At week 16 | TCSd and systemic CSd | Incidence of infections and TEAEs similar across treatment groups; ↑ rate of conjunctivitis and injection-site reactions in groups receiving dupilumab | ||
| IL-13 antagonists | ||||||
| Tralokinumab | ||||||
| Adult phase IIb [ | At week 12a: no difference at week 12 ( | At week 12: 42.5%b (300 mg) improved vs placebo (15.5%) | At week 12 | TCS | Most common TEAEs: headache and infection of upper respiratory tract, 1 subject developed anti-drug antibodies | |
| Lebrikizumab | ||||||
| Adult phase II: TREBLE [ | At week 12: 54.9%b (125 mg) improved vs placebo (34.0%) | At week 12: no difference ( | At week 12a: 82.4%b (125 mg) improved vs placebo (62.3%) | TCS (2 × daily) | No life-threatening TEAEs, no dose-dependent trend in TEAEs | |
| Adult phase IIb [ | At week 16: 60.6%b (250 mg q2w) and 56.1%b (250 mg q4w) improved vs placebo (24.3%) | At week 16: 44.6%b (250 mg q2w) and 33.7%b (250 mg q4w) improved vs placebo (15.3%) | At week 16a: − 72.1%b (250 mg q2w) and − 69.2%b (250 mg q4w) had a mean decrease vs placebo (− 41.1%) | TCSd | No serious TEAEs were attributed to the drug | |
| IL-31 antagonists | ||||||
| Nemolizumab | ||||||
| Adult phase IIb [ | At week 24: 45.6%b (30 mg) improved vs placebo (26.3%) | At week 24: numerically higher, not statistically different ( | At week 24a: larger mean decrease from baseline EASI score in the treatment group (− 68.8%)b vs placebo (− 52.1%) | TCS | Dose-dependent ↑ in asthma exacerbations in treatment group, 2 study discontinuations due to elevations in CPK | |
| Adult phase II [ | At week 12: 23.9% (2 mg/kg q4w), 31.4% (0.5 mg/kg q4w), 19.0% (0.1 mg/kg q4w)c improved vs placebo (11.9%) | At week 12: 22.3% (2 mg/kg q4w), 37.7% (0.5 mg/kg q4w), 32.3% (0.1 mg/kg q4w)c improved vs placebo (18.3%) | At week 12a: larger mean decrease in pruritus VAS from baseline − 63.1%b (2 mg q4w), − 59.8% (0.5 mg q4w)b, and − 43.7% (0.1 mg q4w) vs placebo (− 20.9%) | TCSd | Similar number of AEs among the treatment groups and placebo group; serious AEs included retinal detachment ( | |
| Phase II extension in adults [ | At week 64: 47% (2 mg/kg q8w), 66% (2 mg/kg q4w), 64% (0.5 mg/kg q4w), 58% (0.1 mg/kg q4w)c improved from baseline of parent study | At week 64: 32% (2 mg/kg q8w), 38% (2 mg/kg q4w), 32% (0.5 mg/kg q4w), and 35% (0.1 mg/kg q4w)c improved from baseline of parent study | At week 64a: − 79.1% (2 mg/kg q8w), − 74.7% (2 mg/kg q4w), − 89.6% (0.5 mg/kg q4w), and − 73.0% (0.1 mg/kg q4w)c experienced a mean decrease from baseline of parent study | TCS | No severe AEs; most AEs were mild: headache, lower extremity edema, ↑ CPK, nasopharyngitis, and upper respiratory tract infections | |
| Anti-OX40 antibody | ||||||
| GBR830 | ||||||
| Adult phase IIa [ | At day 71: 42.3%c (10 mg/kg IV) improved vs placebo (25.0%) | At day 71: 23.1%c (10 mg/kg IV) improved vs placebo (12.5%) | At day 71a: treatment group had reduced epidermal hyperplasia vs their baseline while placebo group did notb | Not stated | Most common TEAEs: headache (16%), atopic dermatitis (13%), and nasopharyngitits (10%) | |
| JAK1 and JAK2 inhibitor | ||||||
| Baricitinib | ||||||
| Adult phase III: BREEZE-AD1 [ | At week 16: 24.8%b (4 mg), 18.7%b (2 mg), 17.3%b (1 mg) improved vs placebo (8.8%) | At week 16 | TCSd and systemic CSd | Frequency of TEAEs similar in the placebo vs treatment groups; In BREEZE-AD1 herpes simplex occurred at a higher frequency in the treatment group; ↑ CPK caused treatment interruption for 2 subjects and discontinuation for 1 | ||
| Adult phase III: BREEZE-AD2 [ | At week 16: 21.1%b (4 mg), 17.9%b (2 mg), 12.8%b (1 mg) improved vs placebo (6.1%) | At week 16 | ||||
| Phase II [ | At week 4: higher % of subjects improved (4 mg) vs placebo ( | At week 16: no difference (2 mg; | At week 16a: a higher proportion of treatment subjects (4 mg)b improved vs placebo | TCS | ↑ CPK, ↓ neutrophil levels, and ↑ platelet levels in the treatment groups but not the placebo group | |
| JAK1 inhibitor | ||||||
| Upadacitinib | ||||||
| Adult phase IIb [ | At week 16: higher % of subjects improved (7.5, 15, or 30 mg)b vs placebo | At week 16: higher % of subjects improved (7.5, 15, or 30 mg)b vs placebo | At week 16a: 39% (7.5 mg)b, 62% (15 mg)b, and 74% (30 mg)b improved vs placebo (23%) | None | 2 serious TEAEs included 1 jaw pericoronitis, 1 AD worsening, no dose-dependent TEAEs | |
| JAK1 inhibitor | ||||||
| Abrocitinib | ||||||
| Phase IIb [ | At week 12 | At week 12: a higher % of subjects in the treatment groups (200 mg vs 100 mg)b improved vs placebo | None | Serious TEAEs in treatment groups: pneumonia ( | ||
AD atopic dermatitis, AEs adverse events, CPK creatine phosphokinase levels, CS corticosteroids, EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index, IGA investigator global assessment, IV intravenous, qxw every x weeks, TCS topical corticosteroids, TEAEs treatment-emergent adverse events, ↑ indicate increase, ↓ indicates decrease
aPrimary endpoint
bStatistical significance of at least p < 0.05
cp Value not provided
dAllowed for rescue treatment at the investigator’s discretion
Ongoing clinical trials (as of April 10, 2020)
| Drug | Clinical triala | Phase | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lebrikizumab | NCT04146363 | III | Suspended (due to COVID-19) |
| Nemolizumab | NCT03989206 | III | Recruiting |
| NCT03985943 | III | Recruiting | |
| NCT03989349 | III | Recruiting | |
| Anti-OX40 antibody | NCT03568162 | IIb | Recruiting |
| Baricitinib | NCT03435081 (BREEZE-AD5) | III | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT03733301 (BREEZE-AD7) | III | Completed | |
| NCT03559270 (BREEZE-AD6) | III | Enrolling by invitation | |
| NCT03334435 | III | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT03428100 | III | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT03952559 | III | Recruiting | |
| Abrocitinib | NCT03422822 | III | Recruiting |
| Upadacitinib | NCT03607422 | III | Recruiting |
| NCT03569293 | III | Recruiting | |
| NCT03738397 | III | Recruiting | |
| NCT03568318 | III | Recruiting | |
| NCT03661138 | III | Active, not recruiting |
aClinicalTrials.gov identifier (www.clinicaltrials.gov)
| Our better understanding of the pathophysiology of AD has resulted in an explosion of research into new immunotherapies for this patient population. |
| Multiple new agents targeting IL-13, IL-31, OX40 (CD134), and Janus kinase proteins may be effective for AD. |