Integrated Safety Analysis of Abrocitinib in 635 Adolescent Patients With Moderate-To-Severe Atopic Dermatitis With Over 1000 Patient-Years of Exposure
Amy S. Paller, L. Eichenfield, Jonathan I. Silverberg, M. Cork, Christine Bangert, Alan Irvine, S. Weidinger, Sebastien Barbarot, Haiyun Fan, J. Alderfer, H. Koppensteiner, Kanti Chittuluru
{"title":"Integrated Safety Analysis of Abrocitinib in 635 Adolescent Patients With Moderate-To-Severe Atopic Dermatitis With Over 1000 Patient-Years of Exposure","authors":"Amy S. Paller, L. Eichenfield, Jonathan I. Silverberg, M. Cork, Christine Bangert, Alan Irvine, S. Weidinger, Sebastien Barbarot, Haiyun Fan, J. Alderfer, H. Koppensteiner, Kanti Chittuluru","doi":"10.25251/skin.8.supp.379","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction: Abrocitinib, an oral, once-daily, Janus kinase 1–selective inhibitor, was efficacious and well tolerated in adolescent patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) exposed for approximately 1 year of treatment. Here, we describe the updated long-term integrated safety profile of abrocitinib in adolescent patients in the JADE clinical program.Methods: A total of 635 adolescent patients (12 to <18 years; exposure: 1011.4 patient-years [PY]) were pooled for safety analysis from the phase 3 JADE clinical trials MONO-1 (NCT03349060), MONO-2 (NCT03575871), TEEN (NCT03796676), and REGIMEN (NCT03627767) and subsequently enrolled in the ongoing phase 3 extension trial JADE EXTEND (NCT03422822; data cutoff: September 25, 2021). Incidence rates (IRs; number of unique patients with events/100 PY) of severe adverse events (SAEs) and AEs of special interest were assessed.Results: Of the total 635 adolescents, 490 received the same abrocitinib dose throughout exposure (730.6 PY); 289 received abrocitinib 200 mg (424.5 PY) and 201 received abrocitinib 100 mg (306.1 PY). Duration of exposure was ≥96 weeks in 38% and 37%, and ≥144 weeks in 8% and 4% of patients who received abrocitinib 200 mg or 100 mg, respectively. In the 200-mg and 100-mg arms, AEs occurred in 243 (84%) and 153 (76%) patients; 8% (IR [95% CI], 5.87 [3.76-8.74]) and 9% (5.87 [3.48-9.27]) experienced SAEs, and 10% (6.96 [4.69-9.93]) and 8% (5.13 [2.93-8.33]) discontinued the study due to AEs, respectively. IRs of AEs of special interest were 1.84 (95% CI, 0.79-3.62) and 1.28 (0.35-3.27) for serious infection, 2.11 (0.97-4.01) and 1.62 (0.53-3.77) for all herpes zoster (HZ) infections, and 0.69 (0.14-2.03) and 0.32 (0.01-1.77) for opportunistic HZ infections in the 200-mg and 100-mg arms, respectively. One patient (aged 16 years) in the 200-mg arm had a nonfatal venous thromboembolism event (pulmonary embolism; IR, 0.23 [95% CI, 0.01-1.28]); patient had a family history of pulmonary embolism. There were no events of nonmelanoma skin cancer or other malignancies, tuberculosis, or other opportunistic infections (excluding HZ), major adverse cardiovascular events, or deaths.Conclusions: In this integrated safety analysis using the September 2021 data cut from the ongoing JADE EXTEND trial, abrocitinib had an acceptable long-term safety profile in adolescents with moderate-to-severe AD.","PeriodicalId":22013,"journal":{"name":"SKIN The Journal of Cutaneous Medicine","volume":"8 1‐2","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.379","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: Abrocitinib, an oral, once-daily, Janus kinase 1–selective inhibitor, was efficacious and well tolerated in adolescent patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) exposed for approximately 1 year of treatment. Here, we describe the updated long-term integrated safety profile of abrocitinib in adolescent patients in the JADE clinical program.Methods: A total of 635 adolescent patients (12 to <18 years; exposure: 1011.4 patient-years [PY]) were pooled for safety analysis from the phase 3 JADE clinical trials MONO-1 (NCT03349060), MONO-2 (NCT03575871), TEEN (NCT03796676), and REGIMEN (NCT03627767) and subsequently enrolled in the ongoing phase 3 extension trial JADE EXTEND (NCT03422822; data cutoff: September 25, 2021). Incidence rates (IRs; number of unique patients with events/100 PY) of severe adverse events (SAEs) and AEs of special interest were assessed.Results: Of the total 635 adolescents, 490 received the same abrocitinib dose throughout exposure (730.6 PY); 289 received abrocitinib 200 mg (424.5 PY) and 201 received abrocitinib 100 mg (306.1 PY). Duration of exposure was ≥96 weeks in 38% and 37%, and ≥144 weeks in 8% and 4% of patients who received abrocitinib 200 mg or 100 mg, respectively. In the 200-mg and 100-mg arms, AEs occurred in 243 (84%) and 153 (76%) patients; 8% (IR [95% CI], 5.87 [3.76-8.74]) and 9% (5.87 [3.48-9.27]) experienced SAEs, and 10% (6.96 [4.69-9.93]) and 8% (5.13 [2.93-8.33]) discontinued the study due to AEs, respectively. IRs of AEs of special interest were 1.84 (95% CI, 0.79-3.62) and 1.28 (0.35-3.27) for serious infection, 2.11 (0.97-4.01) and 1.62 (0.53-3.77) for all herpes zoster (HZ) infections, and 0.69 (0.14-2.03) and 0.32 (0.01-1.77) for opportunistic HZ infections in the 200-mg and 100-mg arms, respectively. One patient (aged 16 years) in the 200-mg arm had a nonfatal venous thromboembolism event (pulmonary embolism; IR, 0.23 [95% CI, 0.01-1.28]); patient had a family history of pulmonary embolism. There were no events of nonmelanoma skin cancer or other malignancies, tuberculosis, or other opportunistic infections (excluding HZ), major adverse cardiovascular events, or deaths.Conclusions: In this integrated safety analysis using the September 2021 data cut from the ongoing JADE EXTEND trial, abrocitinib had an acceptable long-term safety profile in adolescents with moderate-to-severe AD.