| Literature DB >> 32557382 |
Lisa A Beck1, Diamant Thaçi2, Mette Deleuran3, Andrew Blauvelt4, Robert Bissonnette5, Marjolein de Bruin-Weller6, Michihiro Hide7, Lawrence Sher8, Iftikhar Hussain9, Zhen Chen10, Faisal A Khokhar10, Bethany Beazley10, Marcella Ruddy10, Naimish Patel11, Neil M H Graham10, Marius Ardeleanu10, Brad Shumel12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Management of moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) commonly requires long-term treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32557382 PMCID: PMC7371647 DOI: 10.1007/s40257-020-00527-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Clin Dermatol ISSN: 1175-0561 Impact factor: 7.403
Fig. 1Study flow diagram
Study completion, reasons for withdrawal, and baseline demographics and disease characteristics
| Dupilumab 300 mg qw [ | ||
|---|---|---|
| Completed up to 1 year | 2207 (82.4) | |
| Completed up to 2 years | 1028 (38.4) | |
| Completed up to 3 years | 347 (13.0) | |
| Completed studyb | 1061 (39.6) | |
| Patients ongoing | 291 (10.9) | |
| Withdrawn from study | 1325 (49.5) | |
| Study terminated by sponsor (regulatory approval/commercialization) | 807 (30.1) | |
| Withdrawal by subjectc | 221 (8.3) | |
| Adverse eventd | 109 (4.1) | |
| Lost to follow-up | 64 (2.4) | |
| Lack of efficacy | 57 (2.1) | |
| Protocol deviation | 32 (1.2) | |
| Pregnancy | 17 (0.6) | |
| Physician decision | 14 (0.5) | |
| Unknown | 4 (0.1) | |
| Age, years [mean (SD)] | 39.2 (13.4) | |
| Male | 1611 (60.2) | |
| Race | ||
| White | 1936 (72.3) | |
| Black or African American | 147 (5.5) | |
| Asian | 541 (20.2) | |
| Other | 33 (1.2) | |
| Not reported | 20 (0.7) | |
| Height, cm [mean (SD)] | 170.7 (9.88) | |
| Weight, kg [mean (SD)] | 77.1 (18.4) | |
| BMI, kg/m2 [mean (SD)] | 26.4 (5.59) | |
| Treatment in the parent study | ||
| Previously treated with dupilumab | 1679 (62.7) | |
| Dupilumab 300 mg qw | 807 (30.1) | |
| Dupilumab 300 mg q2w | 536 (20.0) | |
| Other dupilumab dosese | 336 (12.6) | |
| Received placebo qw in the parent study | 968 (36.2) | |
| Screen failuref | 30 (1.1) | |
| Patients with concurrent atopic/allergic disease history at parent study baseline | 2627 (98.1) | |
| Allergies (other) | 1749 (65.3) | |
| Allergic rhinitis | 1332 (49.8) | |
| Asthma | 1105 (41.3) | |
| Food allergy | 1010 (37.7) | |
| Allergic conjunctivitis | 740 (27.6) | |
| Hives | 368 (13.7) | |
| Chronic rhinosinusitis | 173 (6.5) | |
| Atopic keratoconjunctivitis | 78 (2.9) | |
| Nasal polyps | 63 (2.4) | |
| Eosinophilic esophagitis | 13 (0.5) | |
| Concomitant topical treatments for AD during the study | ||
| Patients who used TCSs | 1416 (52.9) | |
| Patients who used TCIs | 431 (16.1) | |
| Patients who used TCSs or TCIs | 1487 (55.5) | |
| Patients who used TCSs and TCIs | 360 (13.4) | |
| Duration of AD, years [mean (SD)] | 29.9 (14.8) | 29.0 (14.8) |
| EASI (0–72) [mean (SD)] | 16.4 (14.6) | 32.8 (13.2) |
| Patients with IGA score 0–4 [mean (SD)] | 2.7 (0.95) | 3.49 (0.50) |
| 0 or 1 | 320 (12.0) | 0 |
| 2 | 610 (22.8) | 0 |
| 3 | 1288 (48.1) | 1343 (50.2) |
| 4 | 459 (17.1) | 1301 (48.6) |
| Missing | 0 | 30 (1.1) |
| Patients with weekly average Pruritus NRS score (0–10) [mean (SD)] | 5.0 (2.45) | 7.1 (1.93) |
| ≥ 3 | 1769 (66.1) | 2528 (94.4) |
| ≥ 4 | 1505 (56.2) | 2437 (91.0) |
| POEM total score (0–28) [mean (SD)] | 14.7 (8.00) | 20.5 (5.89) |
| DLQI (0–30) [mean (SD)] | 8.5 (7.11) | 14.7 (7.38) |
Data are expressed as n (%) unless otherwise specified
AD atopic dermatitis, BMI body mass index, DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index, EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index, IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment, NRS Numerical Rating Scale, OLE open-label extension, POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure, q2w every 2 weeks, q4w every 4 weeks, q8w every 8 weeks, qw weekly, SD standard deviation, TCI topical calcineurin inhibitor, TCS topical corticosteroid
aIncludes patients from NCT01259323 [14, 19] (N = 7); NCT01859988 [20] (N = 296); NCT01385657 [14, 19] (N = 12); NCT01548404 [14] (N = 51); NCT01639040 [14] (N = 17); NCT02260986 [10] (N = 581); NCT01979016 [18] (N = 44); NCT02210780 [15] (N = 168); NCT02277743 [12] (N = 353); NCT02407756 [16] (N = 5); NCT02395133 [22] (N = 415); NCT02277769 [12] (N = 402); NCT02755649 [11] (N = 313); NCT02647086 [17] (N = 13)
bThese patients completed the treatment and end-of-study periods
cIncludes reasons of relocation, desire for pregnancy, did not want to discontinue treatment for 12 weeks, work/school conflict, and personal reasons not specified
dIncludes patients withdrawn from the study, both those receiving treatment at the time of withdrawal and those not receiving treatment during the safety follow-up period
eIncludes the following dupilumab doses in the parent study: 75 mg qw, 100 mg q4w, 150 mg qw, 200 mg q2w, 200 mg qw, 300 mg q8w, 300 mg q4w, 2 mg/kg, 4 mg/kg
fThese patients had screen failed in the parent study because the enrollment target was met, but they were permitted to enter the OLE
Safety assessment
| Current study (OLE) | CHRONOS (52 weeks) | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 300 mg qw [ | Placebo + TCS [ | 300 mg qw + TCS [ | ||||||||||
| Events | Pts with ≥ 1 event, [ | nE/100 PY | nP/100 PY | Events | Pts with ≥ 1 event [ | nE/100 PY | nP/100 PY | Events | Pts with ≥ 1 event, [ | nE/100 PY | nP/100 PY | |
| TEAEs | 13,826 | 2264 (84.6) | 270.1 | 173.7 | 1520 | 268 (85.1) | 531.9 | 325.1 | 1,500 | 263 (83.5) | 504.5 | 322.43 |
| Serious TEAEs | 354 | 256 (9.6) | 6.92 | 5.28 | 24 | 16 (5.1) | 8.40 | 5.75 | 11 | 10 (3.2) | 3.70 | 3.40 |
| Severe TEAEs | 355 | 246 (9.2) | 6.94 | 5.08 | 46 | 28 (8.9) | 16.10 | 10.31 | 24 | 17 (5.4) | 8.07 | 5.88 |
| TEAEs leading to study drug discontinuation | 116 | 95 (3.5) | 2.27 | 1.87 | 29 | 25 (7.9) | 10.15 | 9.14 | 10 | 9 (2.9) | 3.36 | 3.06 |
| Serious TEAEs related to treatment | 36 | 31 (1.2) | 0.70 | 0.61 | 3 | 3 (1.0) | 1.05 | 1.06 | 2 | 2 (0.6) | 0.67 | 0.68 |
| Deatha | 2 | 2 (< 0.1) | 0.04 | 0.04 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 (0.3) | 0.34 | 0.34 |
| Most common TEAEs by PT (≥ 5% of patients in the OLE) | ||||||||||||
| Nasopharyngitis | 1543 | 752 (28.1) | 30.14 | 19.16 | 90 | 62 (19.7) | 31.49 | 24.93 | 86 | 62 (19.7) | 28.92 | 24.16 |
| Atopic dermatitis | 736 | 438 (16.4) | 14.38 | 9.61 | 243 | 147 (46.7) | 85.03 | 74.32 | 91 | 55 (17.5) | 30.60 | 20.71 |
| Upper respiratory tract infection | 532 | 350 (13.1) | 10.39 | 7.56 | 48 | 32 (10.2) | 16.80 | 12.03 | 65 | 43 (13.7) | 21.86 | 15.85 |
| Headache | 408 | 216 (8.1) | 7.97 | 4.54 | 31 | 19 (6.0) | 10.85 | 6.98 | 48 | 25 (7.9) | 16.14 | 8.97 |
| Conjunctivitisb | 826 | 521 (19.5) | 16.14 | 11.96 | 29 | 25 (7.9) | 10.15 | 9.24 | 91 | 61 (19.4) | 30.60 | 23.37 |
| Injection-site reactions (HLT) | 855 | 260 (9.7) | 16.70 | 5.58 | 105 | 25 (7.9) | 36.74 | 9.39 | 232 | 63 (20.0) | 78.02 | 25.46 |
| Herpes viral infections (HLT) | 715 | 333 (12.4) | 13.97 | 7.21 | 32 | 25 (7.9) | 11.20 | 9.17 | 43 | 22 (7.0) | 14.46 | 7.72 |
| Skin infections | 291 | 231 (8.6) | 5.69 | 4.81 | NA | 57 (18.1) | NA | 20.21 | NA | 26 (8.3) | NA | 7.87 |
| Eczema herpeticum (PT) | 14 | 12 (0.4) | 0.27 | 0.24 | 6 | 6 (1.9) | 2.10 | 2.13 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Most common serious TEAEs by PT (≥ 0.2% of patients in the OLE) | ||||||||||||
| Squamous cell carcinoma of skin | 14 | 8 (0.3) | 0.27 | 0.16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 (0.3) | 0.34 | 0.34 |
| Osteoarthritis | 10 | 9 (0.3) | 0.20 | 0.18 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 (0.3) | 0.34 | 0.34 |
| Dermatitis atopic | 7 | 6 (0.2) | 0.14 | 0.12 | 1 | 1 (0.3) | 0.35 | 0.35 | 2 | 1 (0.3) | 0.67 | 0.34 |
| Syncope | 6 | 5 (0.2) | 0.12 | 0.10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Inguinal hernia | 5 | 5 (0.2) | 0.10 | 0.10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Appendicitis | 5 | 5 (0.2) | 0.10 | 0.10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
HLT MedDRA High Level Term, MedDRA Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities, NA not available, nE number of events, nP number of patients, OLE open-label extension, PT MedDRA Preferred Term, pts patients, PY patient-year, qw weekly, TCS topical corticosteroid, TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event
aOne death in the OLE due to natural causes in an 88-year-old female and one due to unknown causes in a 60-year-old female approximately 5 months after the final dose of study drug; death in CHRONOS previously reported [10]
bIncludes PT: conjunctivitis, conjunctivitis allergic, conjunctivitis bacterial, conjunctivitis viral, and atopic keratoconjunctivitis
Efficacy assessment
| Dupilumab 300 mg qw [ | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 100 [ | Week 124 [ | Week 148a [ | |
| Patients achieving IGA 0 or 1 [ | 589/1014 (58.1) | 271/458 (59.2) | 43/58 (74.1) |
| Patients achieving a reduction in IGA of ≥ 2 from baseline of the parent study [ | 769/996 (77.2) | 359/457 (78.6) | 58/66 (87.9) |
| Patients achieving EASI-50 [ | 979/994 (98.5) | 445/453 (98.2) | 57/58 (98.3) |
| Patients achieving EASI-75 [ | 908/994 (91.3) | 416/453 (91.8) | 56/58 (96.6) |
| Patients achieving EASI-90 [ | 724/994 (72.8) | 337/453 (74.4) | 51/58 (87.9) |
| EASI (primary analysis), observed values [mean (SD)] | 2.6 (3.6) | 2.3 (3.5) | 1.4 (3.2) |
| OC (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | 2.6 (0.1) | 2.3 (0.2) | 1.5 (0.4) |
| LOCF (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | 3.6 (0.2) | 3.6 (0.2) | 3.6 (0.2) |
| MI (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | 2.9 (0.1) | 2.8 (0.1) | 3.5 (0.1) |
| Change in EASI from baseline of the parent study, observed values [mean (SD)] | − 31.3 (14.1) | − 30.0 (13.6) | − 29.2 (14.2) |
| LOCF (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | − 29.8 (0.4) | − 29.8 (0.4) | − 29.8 (0.4) |
| MI (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | − 30.6 (0.4) | − 30.7 (0.4) | − 30.1 (0.4) |
| Percentage change in EASI from baseline of the parent study, % [mean (SD)] | − 91.5 (12.6) | − 92.3 (11.0) | − 95.4 (9.3) |
| Weekly Pruritus NRS (primary analysis), observed values [mean (SD)] | 2.3 (1.9) | 2.3 (1.8) | 2.2 (1.8) |
| OC (sensitivity analysis), mean (SE) | 2.3 (0.1) | 2.3 (0.1) | 2.1 (0.1) |
| LOCF (sensitivity analysis), mean (SE) | 2.5 (0.1) | 2.6 (0.1) | 2.6 (0.1) |
| MI (sensitivity analysis), mean (SE) | 2.4 (0.1) | 2.6 (0.1) | 2.5 (0.1) |
| Change in weekly Pruritus NRS from baseline of the parent study (primary analysis), observed values [mean (SD)] | − 4.7 (2.3) | − 4.5 (2.4) | − 4.4 (2.4) |
| LOCF (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | − 4.7 (0.1) | − 4.6 (0.1) | − 4.6 (0.1) |
| MI (sensitivity analysis) [mean (SE)] | − 4.8 (0.1) | − 4.6 (0.1) | − 4.7 (0.1) |
| Percent change in weekly Pruritus NRS from baseline of the parent study, % [mean (SD)] | − 65.7 (30.2) | − 64.2 (33.4) | − 65.4 (28.5) |
| Patients achieving ≥ 3 reduction in weekly Pruritus NRS from baseline of the parent study [ | 604/764 (79.1) | 313/416 (75.2) | 168/224 (75.0) |
| Patients achieving weekly average Pruritus NRS ≤ 3 [ | 686/888 (77.3) | 395/510 (77.5) | 217/265 (81.9) |
| POEM score [mean (SD)] | 5.4 (5.1) | 5.1 (5.3) | N/A |
| DLQI [mean (SD)] | 2.9 (3.9) | 2.9 (4.3) | N/A |
DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index, EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index, EASI-50 ≥ 50% reduction in EASI from baseline, EASI-75 ≥ 75% reduction in EASI from baseline, EASI-90 ≥ 90% reduction in EASI from baseline, IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment, LOCF last observation carried forward, MI multiple imputation, N1 number of patients with non-missing values, NRS Numerical Rating Scale, POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure, OC observed cohort, qw weekly, SD standard deviation, SE standard error
aThe relatively low patient numbers at week 148 for IGA and EASI resulted from the temporary removal of these assessments from the end-of-treatment visit with the adoption of Amendment 6 that were restored as of Amendment 7
Fig. 2Mean EASI over time. *The relatively low patient number at week 148 resulted from the temporary removal of this assessment from the end-of-treatment visit with the adoption of Amendment 6 that was restored as of Amendment 7. BL baseline, EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index, LOCF last observation carried forward, MI multiple imputation, OC observed cohort, PSBL parent study baseline, SE standard error
Fig. 3Mean weekly average Pruritus NRS over time. BL baseline, LOCF last observation carried forward, MI multiple imputation, NRS Numerical Rating Scale, OC observed cohort, PSBL parent study baseline, SE standard error
| Dupilumab demonstrated favorable safety and sustained efficacy in adults with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) for up to 3 years. |
| The safety data reported in this open-label study are consistent with previously reported controlled studies of up to 52 weeks. |
| These safety and efficacy data support the long-term, continuous use of dupilumab in adults with moderate-to-severe AD. |