| Literature DB >> 36028787 |
Jennifer Cather1, Melodie Young1, Douglas C DiRuggiero2, Susan Tofte3, Linda Williams4, Tayler Gonzalez5.
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic pruritic skin disease that can have a profound negative impact on patients' quality of life, especially in cases of inadequate disease control. Dupilumab, a dual inhibitor of IL-4 and IL-13 signaling, is approved in the United States for the treatment of moderate-to-severe AD in adults (≥ 18 years old) and in children (≥ 6 years old). In this review, we present results from phase 3 trials evaluating dupilumab's efficacy and safety in adults, adolescents, and children. These trials demonstrate that dupilumab provides rapid improvements (in as little as 1 week) and sustained efficacy (up to 4 years) when used as a treatment for moderate-to-severe AD. Dupilumab not only improves skin signs and symptoms, but also provides multiple health benefits beyond the skin, including improvements in quality of life, itch, sleep disturbances, and pain/discomfort. Dupilumab is generally well tolerated, has a favorable safety profile in adults, adolescents, and children, has no serious drug-drug interactions, does not require routine laboratory testing, and is not an immunosuppressant. Taken together, phase 3 trials demonstrate that dupilumab provides rapid and sustained efficacy and is generally well tolerated for the treatment of moderate-to-severe AD across age groups.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Adults; Atopic dermatitis; Children; Dupilumab; Efficacy; Safety
Year: 2022 PMID: 36028787 PMCID: PMC9464283 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-022-00778-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Baseline and clinical characteristics in adults with moderate-to-severe AD
| SOLO 1 & 2 (pooled) | SOLO-CONTINUE | CHRONOSa | OLEb | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo ( | 300 mg q2w ( | 300 mg qw ( | Placebo ( | 300 mg q8w ( | 300 mg q4w ( | 300 mg q2w/qw ( | Placebo + TCS ( | 300 mg q2w + TCS ( | 300 mg | 300 mg | |
| Baseline characteristics | |||||||||||
| Age, mean (SD), years | 38.4 (14.03) | 38.3 (14.37) | 38.2 (14.48) | 37 (27.0–46.0)a | 35 (26.0–46.5)a | 36 (24.0–49.0)a | 36 (26.0–48.0)a | 36.6 (13.01) | 39.6 (13.98) | 36.9 (13.67) | 39.2 (13.4) |
| Race, | |||||||||||
| White | 302 (65.7) | 320 (70.0) | 317 (68.6) | 54 (65.1) | 56 (66.7) | 64 (74.4) | 124 (73.4) | 208 (66) | 74 (70) | 208 (65) | 1936 (72.3) |
| Black/African American | 36 (7.8) | 23 (5.0) | 35 (7.6) | 7 (8.4) | 8 (9.5) | 4 (4.7) | 7 (4.1) | 19 (6) | 2 (2) | 13 (4) | 147 (5.5) |
| Asian | 106 (23.0) | 98 (21.4) | 96 (20.8) | 17 (20.5) | 18 (21.4) | 16 (18.6) | 31 (18.3) | 83 (26) | 29 (27) | 89 (28) | 541 (20.2) |
| Other (or missing data) | 9 (2.0) | 10 (2.2) | 10 (2.2) | 5 (6.0) | 2 (2.4) | 2 (2.3) | 7 (4.1) | 5 (2) | 1 (1) | 9 (3) | 53 (2.0) |
| Sex, | |||||||||||
| Male | 250 (54.3) | 267 (58.4) | 281 (60.8) | 51 (61.4) | 51 (60.7) | 43 (50.0) | 82 (48.5) | 193 (61) | 62 (58) | 191 (60) | 1611 (60.2) |
| Female | 210 (45.7) | 190 (41.6) | 181 (39.2) | 32 (38.6) | 33 (39.3) | 43 (50.0) | 87 (51.5) | 122 (39) | 44 (42) | 128 (40) | 1066 (39.8) |
| Clinical characteristics | |||||||||||
| Duration of AD, mean (SD), yrs | 28.8 (14.43) | 27.9 (15.20) | 27.6 (15.38) | 37 (44.6)b 44 (53.0)c 2 (2.4)d | 53 (63.1)b 30 (35.7)c 1 (1.2)d | 44 (51.2)b 42 (48.8)c 0d | 81 (47.9)b 87 (51.5)c 1 (0.6)d | 27.5 (14.34) | 30.1 (15.53) | 27.9 (14.46) | 29.9 (14.8) |
| Patients with IGA score, | |||||||||||
| 3 | 234 (50.9) | 234 (51.2) | 244 (52.8) | 1 (1.2) | 2 (2.4) | 6 (7.0) | 3 (1.8) | 168 (53) | 53 (50) | 172 (54) | 1288 (48.1) |
| 4 | 225 (48.9) | 223 (48.8) | 218 (47.2) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 147 (47) | 53 (50) | 147 (46) | 459 (17.1) |
| Peak Pruritus NRS, mean (SD) | 7 (2) | 7 (2) | 7 (2) | 2.8 (2.11) | 2.7 (2.27) | 3.1 (2.16) | 2.8 (1.92) | 7 (2) | 7 (2) | 7 (2) | 5.0 (2.5) |
| EASI, mean (SD) | 34 (14) | 32 (13) | 33 (13) | 2.5 (2.31) | 2.3 (2.33) | 2.8 (3.31) | 2.6 (2.92) | 33 (13) | 34 (13) | 32 (13) | 16.4 (14.6) |
| POEM, mean (SD) | 21 (6) | 21 (6) | 20 (6) | 6.1 (5.43) | 6.8 (5.88) | 6.1 (5.11) | 6.4 (5.30) | 20 (6) | 20 (6) | 20 (6) | 14.7 (8.00) |
| DLQI, mean (SD) | 15 (7) | 15 (7) | 15 (7) | 3.4 (4.25) | 3.0 (3.76) | 3.2 (3.93) | 3.4 (4.21) | 15 (7) | 15 (7) | 14 (7) | 8.5 (7.11) |
| History of atopic comorbidities | |||||||||||
| Number of patients, | 460 | 457 | 462 | 82 | 84 | 87 | 167 | 315 | 110 | 315 | 2677 |
| Asthma | 167 (36.6) | 199 (42.8) | 176 (38.7) | 31 (37.8) | 38 (45.2) | 34 (39.1) | 72 (43.1) | 130 (41) | 45 (41) | 116 (37) | 1105 (41.3) |
| Allergiese | 280 (61.4) | 290 (62.4) | 291 (64.0) | 52 (63.4) | 49 (58.3) | 56 (64.4) | 108 (64.7) | 200 (63) | 68 (62) | 211 (67) | 1749 (65.3) |
| Allergic rhinitis | 213 (46.7) | 226 (48.6) | 230 (50.5) | 42 (51.2) | 35 (41.7) | 37 (42.5) | 81 (48.5) | 134 (43) | 53 (48) | 130 (41) | 133 (49.8) |
| Food allergy | 171 (37.5) | 174 (37.4) | 170 (37.4) | 37 (45.1) | 26 (31.0) | 29 (33.3) | 59 (35.3) | 96 (30) | 39 (35) | 112 (36) | 1010 (37.7) |
| Allergic conjunctivitis | 119 (26.1) | 123 (26.5) | 120 (26.4) | 23 (28.0) | 13 (15.5) | 20 (23.0) | 41 (24.6) | 68 (22) | 31 (28) | 73 (23) | 740 (27.6) |
| Hives | 60 (13.2) | 72 (15.5) | 66 (14.5) | 7 (8.5) | 10 (11.9) | 10 (11.5) | 33 (19.8) | 34 (11) | 14 (13) | 34 (11) | 368 (13.7) |
| Chronic rhinosinusitis | 21 (4.6) | 25 (5.4) | 30 (6.6) | 8 (9.8) | 2 (2.4) | 5 (5.7) | 10 (6.0) | 26 (8) | 7 (6) | 12 (4) | 173 (6.5) |
| Nasal polyps | 7 (1.5) | 11 (2.4) | 11 (2.4) | 1 (1.2) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (1.1) | 2 (1.2) | 7 (2) | 2 (2) | 5 (2) | 63 (2.4) |
| Eosinophilic esophagitis | 3 (0.7) | 5 (1.1) | 0 | 1 (1.2) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (2.3) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0) | 1 (1) | 0 (0) | 13 (0.5) |
DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index; EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index; IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment; NRS Numerical Rating Scale; POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure; SD standard deviation; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; q8w every 8 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids; yrs years
aMedian (IQR), years
b < 26 years of age
c ≥ 26 years of age
dMissing data
eCHRONOS patients received concomitant TCS
fData for OLE reflect current study (OLE) baseline
gIncludes any history of atopic comorbidities at baseline
hNumber of patients reflects safety analysis sets for SOLO-pooled, SOLO-CONTINUE, and CHRONOS
iOther than food allergies
Baseline and clinical characteristics in adolescents with moderate-to-severe AD and children with severe AD
| ADOL | PEDSa | PED-OLE (ADOL)b | PED-OLE (PEDS)a | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo ( | 300 mg q4w ( | 200/300 mg q2w ( | Placebo + TCS ( | 300 mg q4w + TCS ( | 100 mg or 200 mg q2w + TCS ( | 2 mg/kg qw ( | 4 mg/kg qw ( | 2 mg/kg qw ( | 4 mg/kg qw ( | |
| Baseline characteristics | ||||||||||
| Age, mean (SD), years | 14.5 (1.8) | 14.4 (1.6) | 14.5 (1.7) | 8.3 (1.8) | 8.5 (1.7) | 8.5 (1.7) | 15 (2) | 14 (2) | 9 (2) | 8 (2) |
| Race, | ||||||||||
| White | 48 (56.5) | 55 (65.5) | 54 (65.9) | 77 (62.6) | 89 (73.0) | 88 (72.1) | N/A | N/A | 16 (94) | 15 (94) |
| Black/African American | 15 (17.6) | 8 (9.5) | 7 (8.5) | 23 (18.7) | 19 (15.6) | 20 (16.4) | N/A | N/A | 0 | 1 (6) |
| Asian | 13 (15.3) | 13 (15.5) | 12 (14.6) | 13 (10.6) | 5 (4.1) | 10 (8.2) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Other (or missing data) | N/A | N/A | N/A | 10 (8.1) | 9 (7.4) | 4 (3.2) | N/A | N/A | 1 (6) | 0 (0) |
| Sex, | ||||||||||
| Male | 53 (62.4) | 52 (61.9) | 43 (52.4) | 61 (49.6) | 57 (46.7) | 65 (53.3) | 6 (35) | 11 (58) | 8 (47) | 9 (56) |
| Female | 32 (37.6) | 32 (38.1) | 39 (47.6) | 62 (50.4) | 65 (53.3) | 57 (46.7) | 11 (65) | 8 (42) | 9 (53) | 7 (45) |
| Clinical characteristics | ||||||||||
| Duration of AD, mean (SD), yrs | 12.3 (3.4) | 11.9 (3.2) | 12.5 (3.0) | 7.2 (2.2) | 7.4 (2.4) | 7.2 (2.3) | 12 (4) | 13 (2) | 7 (3) | 8 (2) |
| Patients with IGA score, | ||||||||||
| 3 | 39 (45.9) | 38 (45.2) | 39 (47.6) | N/A | N/A | N/A | 11 (65) | 11 (58) | 9 (53) | 7 (44) |
| 4 | 46 (54.1) | 46 (54.8) | 43 (52.4) | N/A | N/A | N/A | 5 (29) | 4 (21) | 4 (24) | 8 (50) |
| Peak Pruritus NRS, mean (SD) | 7.7 (1.6) | 7.5 (1.8) | 7.5 (1.5) | 7.7 (1.5) | 7.8 (1.6) | 7.8 (1.5) | 5 (2) | 5 (3) | 6 (3) | 6 (2) |
| EASI, mean (SD) | 35.5 (14.0) | 35.8 (14.8) | 35.3 (13.8) | 39.0 (12.0) | 37.4 (12.5) | 37.3 (10.9) | 26 (17) | 21 (18) | 21 (18) | 32 (20) |
| POEM, mean (SD) | 21.1 (5.4) | 21.1 (5.5) | 21.0 (5.0) | 20.7 (5.5) | 21.3 (5.5) | 20.5 (5.5) | 15 (7) | 16 (8) | 17 (8) | 20 (5) |
| CDLQI, mean (SD) | 13.1 (6.7) | 14.8 (7.4) | 13.0 (6.2) | 14.6 (7.4) | 16.2 (7.9) | 14.5 (6.8) | 9 (5) | 9 (8) | 12 (8) | 12 (4) |
| History of atopic comorbidities, | ||||||||||
| Number of patients, | 85 | 84 | 82 | 120 | 120 | 122 | 17 | 19 | 17 | 16 |
| Asthma | 46 (54.1) | 42 (50.6) | 46 (56.1) | 54 (45.0) | 55 (45.8) | 60 (49.2) | 7 (41) | 8 (42) | N/A | N/A |
| Allergiese | 62 (72.9) | 53 (63.9) | 58 (70.7) | 81 (69.2) | 67 (55.8) | 79 (64.8) | 11 (65) | 14 (74) | N/A | N/A |
| Allergic rhinitis | 57 (67.1) | 48 (57.8) | 59 (72.0) | 72 (60.0) | 73 (60.8) | 73 (59.8) | 10 (59) | 9 (47) | N/A | N/A |
| Food allergy | 48 (56.5) | 52 (62.7) | 52 (63.4) | 83 (69.2) | 75 (62.5) | 75 (61.5) | 8 (47) | 11 (58) | N/A | N/A |
| Allergic conjunctivitis | 16 (18.8) | 21 (25.3) | 20 (24.4) | 16 (13.3) | 14 (11.7) | 14 (11.5) | 6 (35) | 7 (37) | N/A | N/A |
| Hives | 22 (25.9) | 28 (33.7) | 22 (26.8) | 8 (6.7) | 14 (11.7) | 14 (11.5) | 1 (6) | 1 (5) | N/A | N/A |
| Chronic rhinosinusitis | 7 (8.2) | 6 (7.2) | 6 (7.3) | 4 (3.3) | 5 (4.2) | 2 (1.6) | 0 (0) | 3 (16) | N/A | N/A |
| Nasal polyps | 2 (2.4) | 1 (1.2) | 2 (2.4) | 0 | 0 | 2 (1.6) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Eosinophilic esophagitis | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (1.2) | 0 | 1 (0.8) | 1 (0.8) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index; EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index; CDLQI Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index; IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment; IQR interquartile range; TCS topical corticosteroids; NRS Numerical Rating Scale; POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure; SD standard deviation; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; q8w every 8 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids; yrs years
aPEDS patients received concomitant TCS
bData for PED-OLE studies reflect the current study (OLE) baseline
cIncludes any history of atopic comorbidities at baseline
dNumber of patients reflects the safety analysis set for PEDS
eOther than food allergies
Efficacy results in adults with moderate-to-severe AD
| SOLO 1 & 2 (pooled) | SOLO-CONTINUEf | CHRONOSg | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo, week 16 ( | 300 mg q2w, week 16 (N = 457) | Placebo, week 36 ( | 300 mg q2w/qwa, week 36 ( | Placebo + TCS, week 16 ( | 300 mg q2w + TCS, week 16 ( | Placebo + TCS, week 52 ( | 300 mg q2w + TCS, week 52 ( | |
| Proportion of patients achieving IGA 0/1, n (%) | 43 (9.3) | 169 (37.0) | 9/63b (14.3) | 68/126b (54.0) | 39 (12) | 41 (39) | 33 (13) | 32 (36) |
| % change in EASI, LS mean (SE) | − 34.3 (2.3) | − 70.0 (1.8) | − 6.61 (0.80) | − 0.09 (0.51) | − 43.2 (2.26) | − 76.7 (3.77) | − 45.8 (2.70) | − 78.3 (4.44) |
| Proportion of patients achieving EASI-50, n (%) | 107 (23.3) | 306 (67.0) | 33/83 (39.8) | 124/169 (73.4) | 118 (37) | 85 (80) | 79 (30) | 70 (79) |
| Proportion of patients achieving EASI-75, n (%) | 61 (13.3) | 218 (47.7) | 24/79 (30.4) | 116/162 (71.6) | 73 (23) | 73 (69) | 57 (22) | 58 (65) |
| Proportion of patients achieving EASI-90, n (%) | 34 (7.4) | 150 (32.8) | N/A | N/A | 35 (11) | 42 (40) | 41 (16) | 45 (51) |
| POEM, change from baseline, LS mean (SE) | − 4.2 (0.4) | − 10.9 (0.4) | − 7.0 (0.90) | 0.3 (0.56) | − 4.7 (0.38) | − 12.4 (0.63) | − 5.3 (0.46) | − 13.7 (0.75) |
| Proportion of patients with ≥ 4-point reduction in Peak Pruritus NRS, n/ | 47/433 (10.9) | 168/438 (38.4) | 10/78 (12.8)c | 78/159 (49.1)c | 59/229 (20) | 60/102 (59) | 32/249 (13) | 44/86 (51) |
| Proportion of patients with ≥ 3-point reduction in Peak Pruritus NRS, | 67/447 (15.0) | 220/451 (48.8) | 15/82 (18.3)d | 95/166 (57.2)d | 85/306 (28) | 69/105 (66) | 40/256 (16) | 49/88 (56) |
| DLQI, change from baseline, LS mean (SE) | − 4.3 (0.3) | − 9.3 (0.3) | − 3.1 (0.52) | 0.2 (0.33) | − 5.3 (0.31) | − 9.7 (0.51) | − 5.6 (0.36) | − 10.9 (0.59) |
| Peak Pruritus-NRS, change from baseline, LS mean (SE) | − 1.6 (0.1) | − 3.5 (0.1) | − 35.6 (4.3)e | 0.1 (3.1)e | − 2.1 (0.13) | − 4.1 (0.21) | − 2.1 (0.16) | − 4.2 (0.26) |
DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index; EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index; EASI-50 improvement from baseline of at least 50% in EASI; EASI-75 improvement from baseline of at least 75% in EASI; EASI-90 improvement from baseline of at least 90% in EASI; IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment; N1 number of patients with baseline NRS score C 4 and nonmissing values at each visit; N2 number of patients with baseline NRS score C 3 and nonmissing values at each visit; N/A data not available/reported; NRS Numerical Rating Scale; POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; ; TCS topical corticosteroids
aData for SOLO-CONTINUE are pooled and combine the approved dose (300 mg q2w) and unapproved dose (300 mg qw)
bDenominator reflects the number of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 at SOLO-CONTINUE baseline
cDenominator reflects the number of patients with a Peak Pruritus NRS score ≤ 4 at SOLO-CONTINUE baseline
dDenominator reflects the number of patients with a Peak Pruritus NRS score ≤ 3 at SOLO-CONTINUE baseline
ePercent change in Peak Pruritus NRS score from SOLO baseline: difference between SOLO-CONTINUE baseline and week 35, LS mean (SE)
fAll changes from baseline data for SOLO-CONTINUE use SOLO-CONTINUE baseline
gCHRONOS patients received concomitant TCS
Fig. 1Proportions of patients achieving EASI-50, EASI-75, and EASI-90 over time. 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; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids
Fig. 2LS mean percent change in EASI and mean EASI over time. EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index; LS least squares; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids
Fig. 3LS mean percent changes in Peak Pruritus NRS and mean Peak Pruritus NRS over time. LS least squares; NRS Numerical Rating Scale; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids
Fig. 4LS mean percent changes in DLQI or CDLQI and mean DLQI or CDLQI over time. CDLQI Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index; DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index; LS least squares; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids
Fig. 5LS mean percent changes in POEM and mean POEM over time. LS least squares; POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids
Fig. 6A LS mean change in DLQI/CDLQI. B LS mean change in POEM. DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index; CDLQI Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index; POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks
Efficacy results in adolescents with moderate-to-severe AD and children with severe AD
| ADOL | PEDSa | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo, week 16 ( | 200/300 mg q2w, week 16 ( | Placebo + TCS (< 30 kg), week 16 ( | 300 mg q4w + TCS (< 30 kg), week 16 ( | Placebo + TCS (≥ 30 kg), week 16 ( | 200 mg q2w + TCS (≥ 30 kg), week 16 ( | |
| Proportion of patients achieving IGA 0/1, | 2 (2.4) | 20 (24.4) | 8 (13.1) | 18 (29.5) | 6 (9.7) | 23 (39.0) |
| % change in EASI, LS mean (SE) | − 23.6 (5.5) | − 65.9 (4.0) | 49.1 (3.3) | 84.3 (3.0) | 48.3 (3.6) | 80.4 (3.6) |
| Proportion of patients achieving EASI-50, | 11 (12.9) | 50 (61.0) | 26 (42.6) | 58 (95.1) | 27 (43.5) | 51 (86.4) |
| Proportion of patients achieving EASI-75, | 7 (8.2) | 34 (41.5) | 17 (27.9) | 46 (75.4) | 16 (25.8) | 44 (74.6) |
| Proportion of patients achieving EASI-90, | 2 (2.4) | 19 (23.2) | 4 (6.6) | 28 (45.9) | 5 (8.1) | 21 (35) |
| POEM, change from baseline, LS mean (SE) | − 3.8 (1.0) | − 10.1 (0.8) | − 5.9 (1.0) | − 14.0 (1.0) | − 4.7 (0.9) | − 13.6 (0.9) |
| Proportion of patients with ≥ 4-point reduction in Peak Pruritus NRS, | 4/84 (4.8) | 30/82 (36.6) | 7/60 (11.7) | 33/61 (54.1) | 8/62 (12.9) | 35/57 (61.4) |
| Proportion of patients with ≥ 3-point reduction in Peak Pruritus NRS, | 8/85 (9.4) | 40/82 (48.8) | 11/61 (18.0) | 38/61 (62.3) | 15/62 (24.2) | 38/57 (66.7) |
| CDLQI, change from baseline, LS mean (SE) | − 5.1 (0.6) | − 8.5 (0.5) | − 7.2 (0.8) | − 11.5 (0.7) | − 5.6 (0.7) | − 9.8 (0.6) |
| Peak Pruritus NRS, change from baseline, LS mean (SE) | − 1.5 (0.3) | − 3.7 (0.3) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
CDLQI Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index; EASI Eczema Area and Severity Index; EASI-50 improvement from baseline of at least 50% in EASI; EASI-75 improvement from baseline of at least 75% in EASI; EASI-90 improvement from baseline of at least 90% in EASI; IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment; POEM Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure; N1 number of patients with baseline NRS score ≥ 4 and nonmissing values at each visit; N2 number of patients with baseline NRS score ≥ 3 and nonmissing values at each visit; N/A data not available/reported; NRS Numerical Rating Scale; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; TCS topical corticosteroids
aPEDS patients received concomitant TCS
Safety assessment in adults with moderate-to-severe AD
| SOLO 1 & 2 (pooled) | SOLO-CONTINUEa | CHRONOSb | OLEa,c | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo ( | 300 mg q2w ( | 300 mg Qw ( | Placebo ( | 300 mg q8w ( | 300 mg q4w ( | 300 mg q2w/qw ( | Placebo + TCS ( | 300 mg q2w + TCS ( | 300 mg qw + TCS ( | 300 mg Qw ( | |
| Safety assessments, | |||||||||||
| TEAEs | 313 (68.6) | 321 (69.0) | 307 (67.5) | 67 (81.7) | 63 (75.0) | 64 (73.6) | 118 (70.7) | 266 (84) | 97 (88) | 261 (83) | 2264 (84.6) |
| Serious TEAEs | 24 (5.3) | 11 (2.4) | 10 (2.2) | 1 (1.2) | 3 (3.6) | 4 (4.6) | 6 (3.6) | 16 (5) | 4 (4) | 9 (3) | 256 (9.6) |
| Severe TEAEs | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 246 (9.2) |
| TEAEs leading to drug discontinuation | 7 (1.5) | 6 (1.3) | 7 (1.5) | 3 (3.7) | 0 (0) | 2 (2.3) | 0 (0) | 24 (8) | 2 (2) | 9 (3) | 256 (9.6) |
| Serious TEAEs related to drug | N/A | N/A | N/A | 1(1.2) | 3 (3.6) | 4 (4.6) | 6 (3.6) | N/A | N/A | N/A | 31 (1.2) |
| Most common TEAEs by PTd | |||||||||||
| Nasopharyngitis | 39 (9) | 42 (9) | 45 (10) | 11 (13.4) | 11 (13.1) | 11 (12.6) | 32 (19.2) | 61 (19) | 25 (23) | 60 (19) | 752 (28.1) |
| Atopic dermatitis | 148 (32) | 62 (13) | 59 (13) | 40 (48.8) | 27 (32.1) | 30 (34.5) | 34 (20.4) | 144 (46) | 20 (18) | 52 (17) | 438 (16.4) |
| URTI | 10 (2) | 13 (3) | 20 (4) | 6 (7.3) | 7 (8.3) | 5 (5. 7) | 13 (7.8) | 32 (10) | 11 (10) | 43 (14) | 350 (13.1) |
| Headache | 24 (5) | 40 (9) | 33 (7) | 2 (2.4) | 3 (3.6) | 5 (5. 7) | 8 (4.8) | 19 (6) | 5 (5) | 24 (8) | 216 (8.1) |
| Conjunctivitise | 10 (2) | 45 (10) | 33 (7) | 4 (4.9) | 3 (3.6) | 4 (4.6) | 9 (5.4) | 25 (8) | 15 (14) | 61 (19) | 521 (19.5) |
| Injection-site reactionf | 28 (6) | 51 (11) | 72 (16) | 7 (8.5) | 6 (7 .1) | 6 (6.9) | 18 (10.8) | 24 (8) | 16 (15) | 60 (19) | 260 (9.7) |
| Any herpes viral infectiong | 17 (4) | 25 (5) | 21 (5) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 25 (8) | 8 (7) | 22 (7) | 333 (12.4) |
| Non-herpetic skin infectionh | 43 (9) | 23 (5) | 29 (6) | 8 (9.8) | 5 (6.0) | 1(1.1) | 4 (2.4) | 56 (18) | 12 (11) | 26 (8) | N/A |
| Eczema herpeticum (PT) | 3 (0.7) | 3 (0.6) | 2 (0.4) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 6 (1.9) | 1 (0.9) | 0 | 12 (0.4) |
HLT high-level term; N/A data not available/reported; PT preferred term; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; q8w every 8 weeks; SOC system organ class; TCS topical corticosteroids; TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
aSOLO-CONTINUE and OLE do not list the exception for herpes viral infections
bCHRONOS patients received concomitant TCS
cData for OLE reflect the current study (OLE) baseline
dIncludes all MedDRA PTs occurring in: ≥ 2% of patients in any treatment group, except for PTs of herpes viral infections (SOLO and SOLO-CONTINUE); ≥ 5% of patients in any treatment group, except for PTs of herpes viral infections (CHRONOS and OLE)
eReported as a narrow cluster of MedDRA PTs: conjunctivitis, conjunctivitis allergic, conjunctivitis bacterial, conjunctivitis viral, and atopic keratoconjunctivitis
fReported at the SOC level of the MedDRA hierarchy (CHRONOS) or as the MedDRA HLT for injection-site reaction (SOLO, SOLO-CONTINUE, and OLE), which includes injection-site reaction, erythema, swelling, hemorrhage, pruritus, bruising, discomfort, exfoliation, inflammation, nodule, edema, ulcer, hematoma, and pain (as defined in SOLO-CONTINUE)
gReported as the MedDRA HLT for any herpes viral infection (SOLO, CHRONOS, and OLE)
hReported as the MedDRA PT for skin infections (OLE) or as non-herpetic skin infection (adjudicated) (SOLO, SOLO-CONTINUE, and CHRONOS), which includes:
SOLO: folliculitis, impetigo, cellulitis, eczema impetiginous, molluscum contagiosum, furuncle, staphylococcal skin infection, subcutaneous abscess, otitis externa, and tinea versicolor
SOLO-CONTINUE: tinea versicolor, folliculitis, impetigo, skin bacterial infection, skin infection, abscess limb, localized infection, staphylococcal skin infection, subcutaneous abscess, and tinea cruris
CHRONOS: folliculitis, molluscum contagiosum, impetigo, cellulitis, subcutaneous abscess, furuncle, infected dermal cyst, skin bacterial infection, skin bacterial infection, staphylococcal skin infection, infected cyst, nipple infection, otitis externa, paronychia, skin infection, superinfection bacterial, tinea pedis, tinea versicolor, abscess limb, bullous impetigo, dermatitis infected, dermaphytosis, eczema impetiginous, eczema infected, erysipelas, fungal skin infection, infection, staphylococcal infection, tinea cruris, tinea infection, and wound infection
Fig. 7A Treatment-emergent (TE) adjudicated non-herpetic skin Infections (nP/100PY). *Includes all adverse events during the 36-week treatment period. **Nonadjudicated. ***CHRONOS data are from the final data cut; all other CHRONOS data reported in tables and other figures are derived from the primary manuscript. List of non-herpetic skin infections (by PT): SOLO 1 & 2: folliculitis, eczema impetiginous, impetigo, skin infection, cellulitis, molluscum contagiosum, furuncle, otitis externa, infected dermal cyst, staphylococcal skin infection, tinea versicolour, abscess limb, abscess sweat gland, acne pustular, body tinea, erysipelas, eyelid infection, otitis externa fungal, rash pustular, staphylococcal impetigo, subcutaneous abscess, wound infection, onychomycosis, paronychia, skin bacterial infection, soft tissue infection, tinea manuum, tinea pedis; skin and subcutaneous tissue disorder (SOC): interigo. SOLO-CONTINUE: tinea versicolour, folliculitis, impetigo, skin bacterial infection, skin infection, abscess limb, localized infection, staphylococcal skin infection, subcutaneous abscess, tinea cruris. CHRONOS: molluscum contagiosum, folliculitis, impetigo, cellulitis, subcutaneous abscess, furuncle, staphylococcal skin infection, skin bacterial infection, infected dermal cyst, otitis externa, skin infection, infected cyst, tinea versicolour, nipple infection, tinea pedis, superinfection bacterial, paronychia, abscess limb, body tinea, bullous impetigo, dermatitis infected, dermatophytosis, eczema impetiginous, eczema infected, erysipelas, fungal skin infection, infection, staphylococcal infection, tinea cruris, tinea infection, wound infection. OLE: folliculitis, impetigo, tinea pedis, tinea versicolour, cellulitis, furuncle, erysipelas, skin infection, subcutaneous abscess, skin bacterial infection, otitis externa, paronychia, localized infection, fungal skin infection, molluscum contagiosum, staphylococcal skin infection, eczema impetiginous, skin candida, superinfection bacterial, tinea cruris, fungal infection, abscess limb, body tinea, staphylococcal infection, rash pustular, post procedural infection, abscess, pyoderma, infected dermal cyst, eczema infected, infected bites, periorbital cellulitis, abscess sweat gland, tinea capitis, perianal streptococcal infection, bacterial infection, wound infection staphylococcal, groin abscess, dermatitis infected, tinea infection. PEDS: molluscum contagiosum, furuncle, folliculitis, impetigo, cutaneous blastomycosis, eczema impetiginous, skin bacterial infection, staphylococcal infection, staphylococcal skin infection, cellulitis, dermatitis infected. ADOL: angular cheilitis, hordeolum, dermatitis infected, molluscum contagiosum, staphylococcal skin infection, tinea infection. PED-OLE, PEDS: dermatitis infected, molluscum contagiosum, abscess limb, body tinea, hand-foot-and-mouth disease, skin infection, subcutaneous abscess. PED-OLE, ADOL: infections and infestations: angular cheilitis, hordeolum, dermatitis infected, molluscum contagiosum, staphylococcal skin infection, tinea infection. B Treatment-emergent (TE) adjudicated herpes infections (nP/100PY). HLT high-level term; nP/100 PY number of patients per 100 patient-years; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; q8w every 8 weeks; TE treatment emergent. *Includes all adverse events during the 36-week treatment period. **Nonadjudicated. ***CHRONOS data are from the final data cut; all other CHRONOS data reported in tables and other figures are derived from the primary manuscript. List of herpes infections (by PT, unless otherwise noted): SOLO 1 & 2: oral herpes, eczema herpeticum, genital herpes, herpes ophthalmic, herpes simplex, herpes simplex otitis externa, herpes virus infection, herpes zoster. SOLO-CONTINUE: herpes simplex, oral herpes, herpes ophthalmic, genital herpes, herpes virus infection, herpes zoster, ophthalmic herpes simplex, nasal herpes. CHRONOS (HLT): herpes viral infections. OLE (HLT): oral herpes, herpes simplex, herpes zoster, ophthalmic herpes simplex, eczema herpeticum, nasal herpes, herpes virus infection, herpes ophthalmic, genital herpes, ophthalmic herpes zoster, herpes zoster oticus, herpes dermatitis, varicella, herpes simplex otitis externa, herpes zoster disseminated. PEDS: herpes simplex, herpes virus infection, eczema herpeticum, herpes zoster, oral herpes, varicella. ADOL: herpes simplex, oral herpes, eczema herpeticum. PED-OLE, PEDS (HLT): herpes simplex, herpes zoster, nasal herpes, oral herpes, varicella. PED-OLE, ADOL: oral herpes, herpes simplex, nasal herpes
Safety assessment in adolescents with moderate-to-severe AD and children with severe AD
| ADOL | PEDSa,c | PED-OLE (ADOL)b | PED-OLE (PEDS)b | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo ( | 300 mg q4w ( | 200/300 mg q2w ( | Placebo + TCS ( | 300 mg q4w + TCS ( | 100 mg or 200 mg q2w + TCS ( | 2 mg/kg qw ( | 4 mg/kg qw ( | 2 mg/kg qw ( | 4 mg/kg qw ( | |
| Safety assessments, | ||||||||||
| TEAEs | 59 (69.4) | 53 (63.9) | 59 (72.0) | 88 (73.3) | 78 (65.0) | 82 (67.2) | 17 (100) | 18 (95) | 16 (94) | 16 (100) |
| Serious TEAEs | 1 (1.2) | 0 | 0 | 2 (1.7) | 2 (1.7) | 0 | 3 (18) | 0 (0) | 2 (12) | 3 (19) |
| Severe TEAEs | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| TEAEs leading to drug discontinuation | 1 (1.2) | 0 | 0 | 2 (1.7) | 0 | 2 (1.6) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Serious TEAEs related to drug | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Most common TEAEs by PTd | ||||||||||
| Nasopharyngitis | 4 (4.7) | 9 (10.8) | 3 (3.7) | 8 (6.7) | 15 (12.5) | 8 (6.6) | 7 (41) | 9 (47) | 8 (47) | 9 (56) |
| Atopic dermatitis | 21 (24.7) | 15 (18.1) | 15 (18.3) | 17 (14.2) | 8 (6.7) | 10 (8.2) | 5 (29) | 8 (42) | 5 (29) | 2 (13) |
| URTI | 15 (17.6) | 6 (7.2) | 10 (12.2) | 12 (10.0) | 13 (10.8) | 10 (8.2) | 4 (24) | 4 (21) | 2 (12) | 4 (25) |
| Headache | 9 (10.6) | 4 (4.8) | 9 (11.0) | 10 (8.3) | 6 (5.0) | 7 (5.7) | 6 (35) | 5 (26) | 4 (24) | 2 (13) |
| Conjunctivitise | 4 (4.7) | 9 (10.8) | 8 (9.8) | 5 (4.2) | 8 (6.7) | 18 (14.8) | 3 (18) | 3 (16) | 2 (12) | 5 (31) |
| Injection-site reactionf | 3 (3.5) | 5 (6.0) | 7 (8.5) | 7 (5.8) | 12 (10.0) | 13 (10.7) | 3 (18) | 2 (11) | 2 (12) | 1 (6) |
| Any herpes viral infectiong | 3 (3.5) | 4 (4.8) | 1 (1.2) | 6 (5.0) | 2 (1.7) | 4 (3.3) | 3 (18) | 4 (21) | 2 (12) | 4 (25) |
| Skin infectionh | 31 (36.5) | 19 (22.9) | 18 (22.0) | 16 (13.3) | 7 (5.8) | 10 (8.2) | 8 (47.1) | 12 (63.2) | 9 (52.9) | 9 (56.3) |
| Eczema herpeticum (PT) | 1 (1.2) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.8) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
HLT high-level term; N/A data not available/reported; PT preferred term; qw every week; q2w every 2 weeks; q4w every 4 weeks; q8w every 8 weeks; SOC system organ class; TCS topical corticosteroids; TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
aPEDS patients received concomitant TCS
bData for PED-OLE studies reflect current study (OLE) baselines
cNumber of patients reflects the safety analysis set for PEDS
dIncludes all MedDRA PTs occurring in ≥ 5% of patients in any treatment group (ADOL and PEDS) and ≥ 20% of patients in any treatment group (PED-OLE)
eReported as MedDRA PT for conjunctivitis, which includes conjunctivitis, conjunctivitis allergic, conjunctivitis bacterial, conjunctivitis viral, and atopic keratoconjunctivitis
fReported as MedDRA HLT (ADOL, PEDS, and PED-OLE, ≥ 6 to < 12 years of age) or MedDRA PT (PED-OLE, ≥ 12 years of age), which includes edema, hemorrhage, induration, irritation, mass, and swelling
gReported as MedDRA HLT for any herpes viral infection, which includes herpes simplex, nasal herpes, and oral herpes (as defined in PED-OLE, > 12 years of age)
hReported as MedDRA PT for skin infection (adjudicated) and non-herpetic skin infection (adjudicated)(ADOL); skin infection (adjudicated) (PEDS); skin infection (HLT) and noherpetic skin infection (adjudicated)(PED-OLE, ≥ 6 to < 12 years of age); skin infection (PED-OLE, > 12 years of age), which includes angular cheilitis, bacterial disease carrier, dermatitis infected, folliculitis, hordeolum, molluscum contagiosum, skin bacterial infection, staphylococcal skin infections, and tinea infections
| Dupilumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody that blocks the shared receptor component for interleukin-4 and interleukin-13, key and central drivers of type 2 inflammation in multiple diseases; it is the first biologic approved for multiple type 2 inflammatory diseases, including atopic dermatitis (AD), asthma, and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis. |
| Dupilumab provides multidimensional improvements in AD signs and symptoms and offers health benefits beyond the skin in patients aged 6 years and older with moderate-to-severe AD. |
| Dupilumab provides rapid and sustained benefits, with improvements occurring as early as 1 to 2 weeks following the start of treatment. |
| Dupilumab is well tolerated with a favorable safety profile in adults, adolescents, and children. |
| Results from phase 3 trials of dupilumab for the treatment of atopic dermatitis demonstrate that IL-4 and IL-13 are key drivers of type 2 inflammation in AD across all ages. |