Efficacy and safety of crisaborole ointment in Chinese and Japanese patients aged ≥2 years with mild‐to‐moderate atopic dermatitis

Author:

Ma Lin1,Zhang Litao2ORCID,Kobayashi Michiko3,Tao Xiaohua4,Qian Qiufang5,Cheng Hao6,Liu Sujun7ORCID,Zhou Yangmei8,Chen Yayuan8,Zhang Jianzhong9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Children's Hospital, Capital Medical University National Center for Children's Health Beijing China

2. Tianjin Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine Affiliated Hospital Tianjin China

3. Sugamo Kobayashi Derma Clinic Tokyo Japan

4. Zhejiang Provincial People's Hospital Zhejiang China

5. Shanghai Children's Hospital, School of Medicine Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai China

6. Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital School of Medicine, Zhejiang University Zhejiang China

7. Hangzhou Third People's Hospital Zhejiang China

8. Clinical Development, Pfizer R&D China Shanghai China

9. Peking University People's Hospital Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAtopic dermatitis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease with a significant impact on the overall wellbeing of patients and their families. Crisaborole ointment, 2%, is a nonsteroidal phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor approved for the treatment of mild‐to‐moderate atopic dermatitis in multiple countries. However, in the key pivotal trials, a low proportion of the overall patient population was Asian, therefore the safety and efficacy of crisaborole in the Asian population with atopic dermatitis remains unclear. CrisADe CLEAR was a multicenter, randomized, double‐blind, vehicle‐controlled, phase 3 study (NCT04360187) to assess the efficacy and safety of crisaborole ointment in Chinese and Japanese patients aged ≥2 years with mild‐to‐moderate atopic dermatitis involving ≥5% treatable body surface area. Patients were randomly assigned 2:1 to receive crisaborole or vehicle twice daily for 28 days. The primary endpoint was percentage change from baseline in the Eczema Area and Severity Index total score at day 29. Additional endpoints were improvement and success per Investigator's Static Global Assessment score at day 29 and change from baseline on the Peak Pruritus Numerical Rating Scale at week 4. Safety was assessed using rates of treatment emergent adverse events, serious adverse events, and clinically significant changes in vital signs and clinical laboratory parameters. Crisaborole‐treated patients showed a significantly greater reduction versus vehicle in percentage change from baseline in Eczema Area and Severity Index total score at day 29 (P = 0.0002). Response rates for achievement of Investigator's Static Global Assessment improvement and success at day 29 were significantly higher for patients treated with crisaborole versus vehicle (P = 0.0124 and P = 0.0078, respectively). Crisaborole‐treated patients showed a significantly greater reduction versus vehicle in change from baseline on the Peak Pruritus Numerical Rating Scale at week 4 (P = 0.0009). No new safety signals were identified. Treatment with crisaborole was effective and well tolerated in Chinese and Japanese patients with mild‐to‐moderate atopic dermatitis.

Funder

Pfizer

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Dermatology,General Medicine

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