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About
Nummular eczema (NE) is an idiopathic chronic inflammatory skin disease that occurs throughout all life periods. Diagnosis is made primarily clinically in correlation with histological findings. Treatment of NE is difficult. Standard treatment consists of the use of emollients, topical as well as systemic corticosteroids and phototherapy. Nevertheless, remission is hard to achieve and relapse occurs often. Patients usually suffer from severe pruritus and reduced quality of life. Therefore, new therapeutic strategies are urgently needed.
Dupilumab (Dupixent®), a monoclonal antibody inhibiting the IL-4 and IL-13 pathway by targeting the IL-4-receptor, has been approved for the treatment of moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD). Since there is an overlap between AD and NE with both being caused by impaired epidermal barrier, broad immune-mediated inflammation and microbial skin colonization, using Dupilumab in NE seems to be promising.
Full description
This study aims on investigating the efficacy of Dupilumab in NE patients. The primary endpoint is the percent change in Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) score from baseline to week 16.
Secondary endpoints include the number of patients achieving an improvement (decrease) in Physician Global Assessment (PGA) by two or more points at week 16 as compared to week 0 or achieving an absolute PGA of 0 or 1 at Week 16, the EASI 50 score at week 16, the change from baseline in transepidermal waterloss (TEWL) at week 16, significant histological improvement at week 16, change from baseline in the reduction of the use of topical steroids at week 16, change form baseline in the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) at week 16, change from baseline in Pruritus Visual Analog Scale (VAS), change from baseline in the global satisfaction subscale of the treatment satisfaction questionnaire for medication (TSQM) score at week 16 and the safety of Dupilumab.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
11.Inability or unwillingness to undergo repeated punch biopsies. 12.History of allergy to any component of the study medication. 13.Evidence of acute contact dermatitis at screening. 14.Evidence of Zink deficiency defined as Zink level < 20 µg/dL in serum. 15.History of important side effects of medium potency topical corticosteroids (eg, intolerance to treatment, hypersensitivity reactions*, significant skin atrophy, systemic effects), as assessed by the investigator or patient's treating physician.
16. ≥30% of the total lesional surface located on areas of thin skin that cannot be safely treated with medium potency TCS (eg, face, neck, intertriginous areas, genital areas, areas of skin atrophy) at baseline.
17. Planned or anticipated use of any prohibited medications and procedures during study treatment.
18. Known history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. 19. Established diagnosis of Hepatitis B viral infection at the time of screening.
20. Established diagnosis of hepatitis C viral infection at the time of screening.
21. History of past or current tuberculosis or other mycobacterial infection. 22. Presence of skin comorbidities that may interfere with study assessments. 23. Malignancy within 5 years of the screening visit excluding local cutaneous squamous cell 24. Severe concomitant illness(es) 25. Any other medical or psychological condition including relevant laboratory abnormalities at Screening 26. Planned major surgical procedure during the patient's participation in this study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
70 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Beate Schossow, PM; Alexander Böhner, Dr. med.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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