Andreas Wollenberg, M. Cork, Chih-ho Hong, A. Kurbasic, Emilia Vacko, Amy S. Paller
{"title":"Progressive and Sustained Disease Control in Patients with Atopic Dermatitis (AD) Aged 12–17 Years Treated with Tralokinumab for 52 Weeks","authors":"Andreas Wollenberg, M. Cork, Chih-ho Hong, A. Kurbasic, Emilia Vacko, Amy S. Paller","doi":"10.25251/skin.8.supp.377","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction: The ECZTRA 6 trial showed that tralokinumab 300mg provided progressive and sustained efficacy in adolescent patients with moderate-to-severe AD, and was well tolerated with a reassuring long-term safety profile over 52 weeks.\nObjective: To evaluate EASI response and PROs in adolescents from ECZTRA 6 treated with tralokinumab 300mg for the full 52-week treatment period.\nMethods: Patients were randomized to tralokinumab 300mg Q2W (n=97) or placebo (n=94) for 16 weeks. At Week 16, patients initiated on tralokinumab and achieving primary endpoints (IGA 0/1 and/or EASI-75) without rescue were re-randomized to tralokinumab 300mg Q2/4W monotherapy for 36 additional weeks; other patients were switched to open-label tralokinumab 300mg Q2W plus optional topical corticosteroids. Post-hoc analyses were conducted by pooling Week 16–52 data for all patients initially randomized to tralokinumab 300mg Q2W.\n Results: Greater proportions of tralokinumab- vs placebo-treated patients achieved primary endpoints at Week 16; progressive improvement was seen through Week 52. In addition, pruritus NRS score was improved for a greater proportion of tralokinumab- vs placebo-treated patients from baseline to Week 16, with further improvement up to Week 52. Progressive improvements over time were also observed for proportions of patients with reductions of pruritus NRS ≥4, POEM ≥4, and CDLQI ≥6, from baseline. The safety profile was consistent with prolonged treatment following Week 16.\n Conclusions: At Week 16, tralokinumab 300mg Q2W improved EASI and PROs in adolescents with AD, with progressive and sustained improvement seen up to Week 52.","PeriodicalId":22013,"journal":{"name":"SKIN The Journal of Cutaneous Medicine","volume":"37 10","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SKIN The Journal of Cutaneous Medicine","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.25251/skin.8.supp.377","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: The ECZTRA 6 trial showed that tralokinumab 300mg provided progressive and sustained efficacy in adolescent patients with moderate-to-severe AD, and was well tolerated with a reassuring long-term safety profile over 52 weeks.
Objective: To evaluate EASI response and PROs in adolescents from ECZTRA 6 treated with tralokinumab 300mg for the full 52-week treatment period.
Methods: Patients were randomized to tralokinumab 300mg Q2W (n=97) or placebo (n=94) for 16 weeks. At Week 16, patients initiated on tralokinumab and achieving primary endpoints (IGA 0/1 and/or EASI-75) without rescue were re-randomized to tralokinumab 300mg Q2/4W monotherapy for 36 additional weeks; other patients were switched to open-label tralokinumab 300mg Q2W plus optional topical corticosteroids. Post-hoc analyses were conducted by pooling Week 16–52 data for all patients initially randomized to tralokinumab 300mg Q2W.
Results: Greater proportions of tralokinumab- vs placebo-treated patients achieved primary endpoints at Week 16; progressive improvement was seen through Week 52. In addition, pruritus NRS score was improved for a greater proportion of tralokinumab- vs placebo-treated patients from baseline to Week 16, with further improvement up to Week 52. Progressive improvements over time were also observed for proportions of patients with reductions of pruritus NRS ≥4, POEM ≥4, and CDLQI ≥6, from baseline. The safety profile was consistent with prolonged treatment following Week 16.
Conclusions: At Week 16, tralokinumab 300mg Q2W improved EASI and PROs in adolescents with AD, with progressive and sustained improvement seen up to Week 52.