Article Type
Changed
Fri, 06/11/2021 - 10:21
Display Headline
Pliaglis: Dermatologists Gain a Novel Topical Anesthetic

PRAGUE – A novel self-occlusive topical anesthetic cream newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration for local analgesia in superficial dermatologic procedures displayed persuasive evidence of efficacy in a phase III study highlighted at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

The topical anesthetic cream, called Pliaglis, incorporates lidocaine and tetracaine at 70 mg/g each. The FDA approved the product in October 2012 for use in conjunction with filler injections, laser-assisted tattoo removal, pulsed dye laser therapy, and other dermatologic procedures.

At the congress, Y. May Ma, Ph.D., presented the results of a multicenter phase III clinical trial involving 50 patients undergoing laser-assisted hair removal. Investigators applied Pliaglis to half of the skin surface scheduled for treatment and a placebo cream to the other half. Thirty minutes later dermatologists peeled off both materials and got to work.

Participants’ mean pain score for the laser procedure on a 0-100 visual analog scale was 23 for the Pliaglis-pretreated areas compared with 32 for hair removal on the control areas. Eighty percent of patients rated the analgesic effect as adequate on Pliaglis-pretreated skin areas, but only 52% did so for placebo-pretreated areas, reported Dr. Ma of Galderma Laboratories in Sophia Antipolis, France.

Blinded investigators rated 44% of patients as having no pain during laser therapy on areas that had been pretreated with Pliaglis, compared with an investigator-judged 22% pain-free procedure rate on placebo-pretreated areas.

Mild, transient stinging, redness, and erythema were fairly common on Pliaglis-treated skin, but quickly resolved without any intervention, Dr. Ma observed.

This study was funded by Galderma and presented by a full-time Galderma employee.

Meeting/Event
Author and Disclosure Information

Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
topical anesthetic cream, FDA approval, superficial dermatologic procedures, pliaglis dermatology, Y. May Ma
Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

Author and Disclosure Information

Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

PRAGUE – A novel self-occlusive topical anesthetic cream newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration for local analgesia in superficial dermatologic procedures displayed persuasive evidence of efficacy in a phase III study highlighted at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

The topical anesthetic cream, called Pliaglis, incorporates lidocaine and tetracaine at 70 mg/g each. The FDA approved the product in October 2012 for use in conjunction with filler injections, laser-assisted tattoo removal, pulsed dye laser therapy, and other dermatologic procedures.

At the congress, Y. May Ma, Ph.D., presented the results of a multicenter phase III clinical trial involving 50 patients undergoing laser-assisted hair removal. Investigators applied Pliaglis to half of the skin surface scheduled for treatment and a placebo cream to the other half. Thirty minutes later dermatologists peeled off both materials and got to work.

Participants’ mean pain score for the laser procedure on a 0-100 visual analog scale was 23 for the Pliaglis-pretreated areas compared with 32 for hair removal on the control areas. Eighty percent of patients rated the analgesic effect as adequate on Pliaglis-pretreated skin areas, but only 52% did so for placebo-pretreated areas, reported Dr. Ma of Galderma Laboratories in Sophia Antipolis, France.

Blinded investigators rated 44% of patients as having no pain during laser therapy on areas that had been pretreated with Pliaglis, compared with an investigator-judged 22% pain-free procedure rate on placebo-pretreated areas.

Mild, transient stinging, redness, and erythema were fairly common on Pliaglis-treated skin, but quickly resolved without any intervention, Dr. Ma observed.

This study was funded by Galderma and presented by a full-time Galderma employee.

PRAGUE – A novel self-occlusive topical anesthetic cream newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration for local analgesia in superficial dermatologic procedures displayed persuasive evidence of efficacy in a phase III study highlighted at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.

The topical anesthetic cream, called Pliaglis, incorporates lidocaine and tetracaine at 70 mg/g each. The FDA approved the product in October 2012 for use in conjunction with filler injections, laser-assisted tattoo removal, pulsed dye laser therapy, and other dermatologic procedures.

At the congress, Y. May Ma, Ph.D., presented the results of a multicenter phase III clinical trial involving 50 patients undergoing laser-assisted hair removal. Investigators applied Pliaglis to half of the skin surface scheduled for treatment and a placebo cream to the other half. Thirty minutes later dermatologists peeled off both materials and got to work.

Participants’ mean pain score for the laser procedure on a 0-100 visual analog scale was 23 for the Pliaglis-pretreated areas compared with 32 for hair removal on the control areas. Eighty percent of patients rated the analgesic effect as adequate on Pliaglis-pretreated skin areas, but only 52% did so for placebo-pretreated areas, reported Dr. Ma of Galderma Laboratories in Sophia Antipolis, France.

Blinded investigators rated 44% of patients as having no pain during laser therapy on areas that had been pretreated with Pliaglis, compared with an investigator-judged 22% pain-free procedure rate on placebo-pretreated areas.

Mild, transient stinging, redness, and erythema were fairly common on Pliaglis-treated skin, but quickly resolved without any intervention, Dr. Ma observed.

This study was funded by Galderma and presented by a full-time Galderma employee.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Pliaglis: Dermatologists Gain a Novel Topical Anesthetic
Display Headline
Pliaglis: Dermatologists Gain a Novel Topical Anesthetic
Legacy Keywords
topical anesthetic cream, FDA approval, superficial dermatologic procedures, pliaglis dermatology, Y. May Ma
Legacy Keywords
topical anesthetic cream, FDA approval, superficial dermatologic procedures, pliaglis dermatology, Y. May Ma
Sections
Article Source

AT THE ANNUAL CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY AND VENEREOLOGY

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article

Vitals

Major Finding: Eighty percent of patients who received a new self-occlusive topical anesthetic cream prior to laser-assisted hair removal indicated they experienced adequate analgesia.

Data Source: Data are from a phase III clinical trial involving 50 patients who received the novel anesthetic cream on half of the target skin area and a placebo cream on the other half.

Disclosures: This study was funded by Galderma and presented by a full-time Galderma employee.