Background: Additional long-term treatments are needed for moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD). An ongoing, open-label, 5-year extension trial, ECZTEND (NCT03587805), assesses tralokinumab plus optional topical corticosteroids in participants from previous tralokinumab parent trials (PTs) with moderate-to-severe AD.
Objective: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of up to 2 years tralokinumab treatment in a post hoc interim analysis.
Methods: Safety analyses included adults from completed PTs enrolled in ECZTEND, regardless of tralokinumab exposure duration. Efficacy analyses included adult participants treated with tralokinumab in ECZTEND for ≥1 year and subgroup analyses of those on tralokinumab for 2 years (1 year from PT, 1 year in ECZTEND). Primary end point was the number of adverse events with additional efficacy end points.
Results: Participants on tralokinumab had an exposure-adjusted rate of 237.8 adverse events/100 patient-years' exposure (N = 1174) in the safety analysis set. Exposure-adjusted incidence rates of common adverse events were comparable to PTs, although at lower rates. With 2 years of tralokinumab, improvements in extent and severity of AD were sustained, with Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI-75) in 82.5% of participants (N = 345).
Limitations: Possible selection bias; no placebo arm; some participants experienced treatment gaps between PTs and ECZTEND.
Conclusion: Over 2 years, tralokinumab was well tolerated and maintained long-term control of AD signs and symptoms.
Keywords: IL-13; atopic dermatitis; biologic therapy; efficacy; long-term; monoclonal antibody; open label; safety; tralokinumab.
Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Dermatology, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.