Eczema: New drug eases symptoms in young children

  • Between 15% and 20% of children worldwide have an inflammatory skin condition known as eczema.
  • Results from a phase 3 clinical trial found the medication dupilumab provides at least a 75% improvement in eczema symptoms in children ages 6 months to 5 years old.
  • U.S. regulators approved the use of dupilumab in children ages 6 months to 5 years of age in June 2022.

Between 15% and 20% of children around the world have eczema — an inflammatory skin condition that is currently incurable.

Because of its symptoms, past research shows children with eczema — clinically known as atopic dermatitis — face higher rates of mental health issues such as depression and anxiety. They may also struggle with sleeping.

Now, a phase 3 clinical trial recently published in The Lancet reports that the drug dupilumab provided at least a 75% improvement in eczema symptoms by week 16 in children ages 6 months to 5 years old when used in conjunction with a topical corticosteroid.

What is eczema? 

Atopic dermatitis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease caused by a variety of reasons, including a person’s inflammatory response, certain triggers, genetic history, and stress.

Symptoms of eczema include:

  • extremely dry, flakey, and/or cracked skin
  • rashes on the neck, wrists, and ankles, or behind the elbows and knees, in children
  • itching
  • red, irritated skin
  • blisters/sores that easily break and leak fluid

There is currently no cure for atopic dermatitis, but doctors treat flare-ups of the disease as well as provide preventative measures for future outbreaks.

Traditional eczema symptom medications include:

  • corticosteroid creams
  • immunosuppressant medications
  • antihistamines
  • antibiotics

Atopic dermatitis in children

Eczema is common in children. Research shows that 60% of children first develop eczema symptoms during the first year of life, with some children outgrowing eczema as they near adulthood.

“Babies and young children with uncontrolled atopic dermatitis may be constantly scratching, irritable, and awake multiple times in the night with their parents, which can impact (the) quality of life for both the children and their parents,” explained Dr. Amy S. Paller, the chair of dermatology and professor of pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Illinois and a principal investigator of the phase 3 clinical trial.

According to Paller, there was a need for treatment options for infants and young children with uncontrolled moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis before the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of Dupixent in children ages 6 months to 5 years of age with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis in June 2022.

“The treatment options for patients between the ages of 6 months and 5 years were mostly limited to topical steroids,” she explained to Medical News Today. “Given that the options otherwise were only immune suppressants like oral steroids, cyclosporine, and methotrexate, we as pediatric dermatologists were very hesitant to move to anything beyond topical steroids. And, frankly, even worried about using potent steroids chronically, which some of these children with moderate-to-severe eczema need for even partial control.”

What is dupilumab?

Dupixent (dupilumab) is a medication created by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. and jointly developed by Regeneron and Sanofi.

The Food & Drug Administration (FDA) first approved Dupixent for the treatment of atopic dermatitis in adults in March 2017. The FDA then expanded the use of Dupixent in 2020 for children ages 6 to 11 years old before the approval earlier this year for children ages 6 months to 5 years of age.

Paller stated that dupilumab is a biologic medicine that works to help address an underlying source of inflammation — called type 2 inflammation — that contributes to atopic dermatitis. She added that dupilumab is not an immunosuppressant or steroid.

“Many parents and caregivers of babies and young children with uncontrolled moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis have tried multiple topical therapies, and some have even tried systemic steroids or broad immunosuppressants, and still remain uncontrolled, which leaves them searching for new options,” she explained. “Long-term use of corticosteroids and off-label immunosuppressants can be temporarily effective but can also be associated with significant side effects.”

Dupilumab efficacy for young children

The phase 3 clinical trial evaluated the safety and efficacy of dupilumab in 162 children ages 6 months and 5 years with uncontrolled moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis.

The study participants either received an injected dose of the medication every four weeks in conjunction with a low-potency topical corticosteroid, or just the topical corticosteroid in the placebo group.

After 16 weeks of treatment, researchers reported more than half of the participants receiving dupilumab had at least a 75% improvement in their Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI-75). Medical professionals use the EASI-75 to measure the number of inflamed areas on the body and their severity.

Researchers also found that 48% of participants receiving dupilumab had a reduction in itchiness and 28% had almost-clear or clear skin after 16 weeks.

“The research showed the effect of dupilumab for most of these younger children is dramatic and at least as good as we’ve seen with the riskier immunosuppressant medications,” Paller commented. “Importantly, although the dupilumab is an every 4-week injection, there just is a huge safety advantage and the children do not need the frequent blood draws to monitor the safety required for other medications — in fact, no blood draws are needed with dupilumab.”

Evaluating safety

In regards to safety, the research team reported a safety profile similar to that of patients 6 years and older taking dupilumab for atopic dermatitis.

The most common adverse effects observed in the children participating in the dupilumab group during the clinical trial included:

  • herpes viral infection (6%)
  • pink eye, clinically known as conjunctivitis (5%)
  • molluscum contagiosum (5%)
  • runny nose, clinically known as rhinorrhea (5%)
  • tooth decay or dental cavities, clinically known as dental caries (5%)

“Dupilumab has been studied in a number of extensive clinical trial programs and has demonstrated a strong safety profile across a number of age groups, and has been studied up to one year in young children,” Paller reported. “Safety results from the trial, as well as a one-year open-label extension trial, in children aged 6 months to 5 years were generally consistent with the known safety profile of dupilumab in patients 6 years and up. That is limited to some reactions at the site of injection, which actually were not seen compared to placebo in the trials in these 6-month to 5-year-old children, and some increased eye redness or conjunctivitis — still in the minority and managed with some medication.”

‘Super exciting data’

MNT also spoke with Dr. Emma Guttman-Yassky, a professor and system chair for The Kimberly and Eric J. Waldman Department of Dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, about this clinical trial data.

“This is super exciting data, as until now we did not have safe and effective treatments for our atopic dermatitis patients,” she said. “Dupilumab is a specific immune modulator that is safe for long-term use, unlike previously used immune suppressants that are not so safe for long-term use.”

When asked about the safety profile of dupilumab, Guttman-Yassky commented, “it’s important to tell parents about the possibility of conjunctivitis/dry eye condition, but overall the safety profile was very good.”

Guttman-Yassky also mentioned there is some additional research she would like to see for dupilumab.

“I would like to see minimally invasive biomarker approaches, such as tape strips, that we have shown in infants and children utilized in such studies to inform on pathogenesis,” she said.

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