» Articles » PMID: 34416294

Abrocitinib Induction, Randomized Withdrawal, and Retreatment in Patients with Moderate-to-severe Atopic Dermatitis: Results from the JAK1 Atopic Dermatitis Efficacy and Safety (JADE) REGIMEN Phase 3 Trial

Abstract

Background: The heterogeneous course of moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis necessitates treatment flexibility.

Objective: We evaluated the maintenance of abrocitinib-induced response with continuous abrocitinib treatment, dose reduction or withdrawal, and response to treatment reintroduction following flare (JAK1 Atopic Dermatitis Efficacy and Safety [JADE] REGIMEN: National Clinical Trial 03627767).

Methods: Patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis responding to open-label abrocitinib 200 mg monotherapy for 12 weeks were randomly assigned in a 1:1:1 ratio to blinded abrocitinib (200 or 100 mg) or placebo for 40 weeks. Patients experiencing flare received rescue treatment (abrocitinib 200 mg plus topical therapy).

Results: Of 1233 patients, 798 responders to induction (64.7%) were randomly assigned. The flare probability during maintenance was 18.9%, 42.6%, and 80.9% with abrocitinib 200 mg, abrocitinib 100 mg, and placebo, respectively. Among patients with flare in the abrocitinib 200 mg, abrocitinib 100 mg, and placebo groups, 36.6%, 58.8%, and 81.6% regained investigator global assessment 0/1 response, respectively, and 55.0%, 74.5%, and 91.8% regained eczema area and severity index response, respectively, with rescue treatment. During maintenance, 63.2% and 54.0% of patients receiving abrocitinib 200 and 100 mg, respectively, experienced adverse events.

Limitations: The definition of protocol-defined flare was not established, limiting the generalizability of findings.

Conclusion: Induction treatment with abrocitinib was effective; most responders continuing abrocitinib did not flare. Rescue treatment with abrocitinib plus topical therapy effectively recaptured response.

Citing Articles

Risk of infections during treatment with oral Janus kinase inhibitors in randomized placebo-controlled trials: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Isufi D, Jensen M, Loft N, Skov L, Elberling J, Alinaghi F JAAD Int. 2024; 18:106-116.

PMID: 39717054 PMC: 11664075. DOI: 10.1016/j.jdin.2024.09.012.


Atopic dermatitis.

Carr S, Pratt R, White F, Watson W Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol. 2024; 20(Suppl 3):63.

PMID: 39654051 PMC: 11629513. DOI: 10.1186/s13223-024-00927-2.


The regulatory T cell-selective interleukin-2 receptor agonist rezpegaldesleukin in the treatment of inflammatory skin diseases: two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 1b trials.

Silverberg J, Rosmarin D, Chovatiya R, Bieber T, Schleicher S, Beck L Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):9230.

PMID: 39455575 PMC: 11511931. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53384-1.


Infection risk with JAK inhibitors in dermatoses: a meta-analysis.

Ireland P, Verheyden M, Jansson N, Sebaratnam D, Sullivan J Int J Dermatol. 2024; 64(1):24-36.

PMID: 39367521 PMC: 11685059. DOI: 10.1111/ijd.17501.


JAK inhibitor selectivity: new opportunities, better drugs?.

Virtanen A, Spinelli F, Telliez J, OShea J, Silvennoinen O, Gadina M Nat Rev Rheumatol. 2024; 20(10):649-665.

PMID: 39251770 DOI: 10.1038/s41584-024-01153-1.