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Continued Treatment with Dupilumab is Associated with Improved Efficacy in Adults with Moderate-to-Severe Atopic Dermatitis Not Achieving Optimal Responses with Short-Term Treatment

Authors
Armstrong, AprilBlauvelt, AndrewSimpson, Eric L.Smith, Catherine H.Herranz, PedroKataoka, YokoSeo, Seong JunFerrucci, Silvia M.Chao, JingdongChen, ZhenShumel, BradRossi, Ana B.Tomondy, Paul
Issue Date
Jan-2022
Publisher
ADIS INT LTD
Keywords
Atopic dermatitis; Dupilumab; Efficacy
Citation
DERMATOLOGY AND THERAPY, v.12, no.1, pp 195 - 202
Pages
8
Journal Title
DERMATOLOGY AND THERAPY
Volume
12
Number
1
Start Page
195
End Page
202
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/52803
DOI
10.1007/s13555-021-00643-4
ISSN
2193-8210
2190-9172
Abstract
Introduction Previous drug survival studies of dupilumab in atopic dermatitis (AD) show that many patients continue treatment through 1 year, suggesting that patients experience clinically relevant benefits with long-term treatment. Methods This post hoc analysis included data through week 100 from 391 adult patients from the dupilumab open-label extension (OLE) study who had not achieved the endpoints of at least 75% improvement from baseline in the Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI-75) or an Investigator's Global Assessment (IGA) score of 0 or 1 with short-term (16 weeks, 300 mg qw or q2w) dupilumab treatment in the parent SOLO 1 or 2 studies. All patients received dupilumab 300 mg qw in the OLE study, irrespective of whether they received qw or 2qw dosing in the parent study. Results Among those who had not achieved EASI-75 or IGA 0/1 during the 16-week parent study, the proportion of patients achieving EASI-75 by week 100 was 91%. The proportion achieving IGA 0 or 1 at week 100 was 45% for patients initially on q2w week dosing and 49% for those on initial qw dosing. Conclusion Long-term dupilumab treatment may be associated with improvement in AD in patients with suboptimal responses during the initial 16 weeks of treatment.
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