Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Real-world experience on the use of Upadacitinib in the treatment of Adult moderate-severe atopic dermatitis
Full description
Atopic dermatitis (DA) is a chronic-recurrent inflammatory skin disease with high prevalence in children. Clinical remission is frequently observed during or after childhood although it may persist and/or recur, even after long and transient remission, in adulthood. In addition, in some patients the DA begins in adulthood: in these cases, we speak of DA adult-onset. In addition to the diagnostic framework, it is also important in clinical practice to assess the severity of the disease on which the choice of treatment is based, which will also take into account other factors such as: possible comorbidities, Previously performed therapies and patient needs. For the management of moderate-severe forms of atopic dermatitis topical drugs, phototherapy, traditional immunomodulating drugs and a biological drug are currently available. Compared to other chronic inflammatory skin diseases the therapeutic paraphernalia should be considered limited, with most systemic drugs that have no indication for the treatment of DA (off-label use).
In the pipeline there are numerous drugs that have reached an advanced stage of development. These include upadacitinib, a new-generation oral drug (small molecule) that selectively inhibits the signal mediated by Janus kinases 1 (JAK-1), has recently received approval for treatment of DA by EMA and AIFA to begin compassionate use of patients deemed contraindicated, intolerant, and/or non-responsive to traditional systemic therapies and biological therapy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Central trial contact
Ketty MD Peris
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal