Abstract
BackgroundCicatricial alopecias (CA) are chronic, progressive scarring hair-loss conditions. Molecular dysregulation is not fully understood, hindering treatment development. Th1/IFNγ signaling and JAK dysregulation has shown involvement, providing rationale for this phase 2a trial with TYK2/JAK1 inhibitor brepocitinib. MethodsRandomized, placebo-controlled phase 2a trial spanning 52 weeks. Adults (18≥years of age) with lichen planopilaris, frontal fibrosing alopecia, or central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia diagnosis were randomized 3:1 to brepocitinib 45mg daily or placebo for 24 weeks, after which all patients received brepocitinib for another 24 weeks, with a safety follow up 4 weeks later. Lesional scalp biopsies were collected at baseline, week 24, and week 48. Co-primary endpoints were changes in lesional expression of CCL5, changes in lesional expression of fibrosis-related markers, and safety at week 24. ResultsPatients receiving brepocitinib showed significant downregulation in CCL5 expression at week 24 (p=0.004). Enrichment analysis of a subset of fibrosis markers showed trending upregulation in placebo patients (p<0.1). Brepocitinib was well tolerated and improved clinical severity scores. LimitationsSingle-dose regimen, small placebo group. ConclusionBrepocitinib significantly reduces CCL5 expression and was well tolerated at week 24, meeting co-primary endpoints. Brepocitinib reduces inflammatory biomarker expression and improves clinical severity, while maintaining favorable safety profile.
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