AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to evaluate different dosing regimens of dupilumab for patients with controlled atopic dermatitis (AD), using a patient-centered approach, as no real-world studies existed on this topic.
  • Ninety adult patients were divided into three groups based on their dupilumab dosing frequency, with results showing that disease severity scores remained stable despite changes in dosing intervals.
  • Although some patients experienced a temporary increase in pruritus (itching), overall biomarkers and dupilumab serum levels indicated that dose reduction could be effective while maintaining low disease activity for those with controlled AD.

Article Abstract

Background: At present, no real-world studies are available on different dupilumab dosing regimens in controlled atopic dermatitis (AD). The aim of this study was to clinically evaluate a patient-centered dupilumab dosing regimen in patients with controlled AD and to relate this to serum drug levels and serum biomarkers.

Methods: Ninety adult AD patients from the prospective BioDay registry were included based on their dupilumab administration interval according to a predefined patient-centered dosing regimen. Group A (n = 30) did not fulfill the criteria for interval prolongation and continued using the standard dupilumab dosage (300 mg/2 weeks), group B (n = 30) prolonged dupilumab interval with 50% (300 mg/4 weeks), and group C (n = 30) prolonged dupilumab interval with 66%-75% (300 mg/6-8 weeks). AD severity score, patient-reported outcomes, serum dupilumab levels, and serum biomarkers were analyzed over time.

Results: Disease severity scores did not significantly change over time during the tapering period in any of the groups. In groups B and C, the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS)-pruritus temporarily significantly increased after interval prolongation but remained low (median NRS-pruritus≤4). Median dupilumab levels remained stable in group A (standard dosage), but significantly decreased in groups B and C (24.1 mg/L (IQR = 17.1-45.6); 12.5 mg/L (IQR = 1.7-22.3)) compared with the levels during the standard dosage (88.2 mg/L [IQR = 67.1-123.0, p < .001]). Disease severity biomarker levels (CCL17/CCL18) remained low in all study groups during the whole observation period.

Conclusions: This study showed that dose reduction was successful in a subgroup of patients with controlled AD by using a patient-centered dosing regimen. These patients showed stable low disease activity and low severity biomarkers over time.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/all.15439DOI Listing

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