Abstract

To investigate the therapeutic effectiveness and safety of Janus kinase 1 inhibitor upadacitinib in adolescent patients with atopic dermatitis (AD). This study examined therapeutic effectiveness and safety of upadacitinib for 39 Japanese adolescent patients (aged 12-17 years) diagnosed with moderate-to-severe AD from August 2021 to January 2023. The patients were treated with upadacitinib 15 mg/day plus twice daily topical corticosteroids. Total eczema area and severity index (EASI) or EASI on head and neck, upper limbs, lower limbs, and trunk or for erythema, edema/papulation, excoriation, or lichenification, atopic dermatitis control tool (ADCT), peak pruritus-numerical rating scale (PP-NRS), and laboratory indexes were assessed at weeks 0, 4, and 12 of treatment. Treatment-emergent adverse events were recorded. Total EASI or EASI on 4 anatomical sites or for 4 rash types, ADCT, and PP-NRS were significantly reduced at week 4 and 12 compared to week 0. The achievement rates at weeks 4 or 12 were 64.1% or 62.5% for EASI 75, 93.5% or 73.1% for ADCT <7-point, and 80.6% or 60% for PP-NRS ≥4-point improvement, respectively, indicating their peak at week 4 and slight decrease at week 12. The percent reduction of EASI for excoriation was higher than that for lichenification or edema/papulation at week 4 or week 12, respectively. The percent reductions of EASI for erythema and edema/papulation on head and neck were lower than those on lower limbs at week 12. Total eosinophil counts (TEC) and IgE reduced at week 4 compared to week 0 while TARC, IgE, TEC, and LDH increased at week 12 compared to week 4. These results suggest therapeutic effectiveness and tolerability of upadacitinib and support its therapeutic usefulness for adolescent AD patients.

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