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About
Clindamycin 1.0% - tretinoin 0.025% gel (CT Gel) is a reformulation of VELAC Gel that contains the same active ingredients (clindamycin 1.0% and tretinoin 0.025%) in a modified vehicle. This was a single-center, evaluator-blinded, randomized, placebo (vehicle)-controlled phase 1 study to evaluate the phototoxic potential of CT Gel using 24 hour single applications of 3 sets of 3 study patches. The study expected to enroll approximately 40 healthy adult volunteers. Each set of study patches consisted of a CT Gel patch, a vehicle gel patch, and a blank patch (did not contain CT Gel or vehicle gel).
After concurrent 24-hour single applications of all 9 patches, 1 set of patches (set A) was removed, and those sites were irradiated with 16 joules/cm2 of ultraviolet A light (UVA) and 0.75 minimal erythema dose (MED) with UVA/ultraviolet B light (UVB). The second set of patches (set B) was removed, and those sites were irradiated with 16 joules/cm2 of UVA, 0.75 MED with UVB/UVA, followed by 15 joules/cm2 of visible light (VIS). The third set of patches (set C) was then removed, and those sites served as a non irradiated control. Inflammatory responses and other cutaneous effects were scored 1 hour after patch removal and during follow-up visits at 24, 48, and 72 hours after patch removal.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
The capability of understanding and providing signed and dated written voluntary informed consent (and any local or national authorization requirements) before any protocol-specific procedures were performed.
Male or female subjects aged from 18 to 65 years, inclusive, at time of consent.
The ability to complete the study and to comply with study instructions.
Possessed Fitzpatrick skin type I (always burns easily; never tans), II (always burns easily; tans minimally), or III (burns moderately; tans gradually) that would not interfere with the reading of any skin responses. Determination of skin types was based on sunburn and tanning histories, as well as subjects' opinions of their responses to the first 30 to 45 minutes of sun exposure.
Sexually active females of childbearing potential who agreed to use a medically acceptable method of contraception while receiving protocol-assigned product. A woman of childbearing potential was defined as one who was biologically capable of becoming pregnant, including perimenopausal women who were less than 2 years from their last menses. Acceptable contraceptive methods included the following:
Women who were not currently sexually active or lactating agreed to use a medically accepted method of contraception if she became sexually active while participating in the study.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
37 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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