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For frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), a disease with no approved therapies, topical delgocitinib attenuated inflammation and generated hair regrowth in women in a controlled phase 2a trial.

“This is an exciting avenue for FFA if the data are recapitulated in a larger population. It could be an important new treatment option,” said Maryanne Senna, MD, director at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center’s Hair Loss Center of Excellence, Burlington, Massachusetts, and assistant dermatology professor at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

In a design characterized as “exploratory,” the trial had two parts: a randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled intervention for 12 weeks, followed by an open-label extension of topical delgocitinib for all participants for another 12 weeks. 

The primary efficacy endpoint was change in the molecular signature of FFA inflammation at 12 weeks. Clinical improvement was monitored with both trichoscopic images capturing the numbers of hairs and follicular units at 12 weeks and clinical severity scores through week 24. In a topical cream formulation, the Janus kinase inhibitor (JAKi) delgocitinib was associated with favorable activity for both. 
 

Some Hair Regrowth for All

“At 24 weeks, all patients achieved some degree of hair regrowth and a stabilization of disease based on hairline measurements,” Senna reported in a late-breaking news session at the 2024 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress

On the clinical endpoints, Senna noted an upward trajectory in clinical improvement at the completion of the study.

The 30 participants were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive delgocitinib cream in a concentration of 20 mg/g or vehicle cream applied twice daily for 12 weeks. At the end of this double-blind period, patients on vehicle were crossed over to the active therapy, and all patients were monitored for another 12 weeks in an open-label extension. 

The change from baseline in FFA biomarkers was selected as the primary endpoint based on previous work showing up-regulation in the expression of the Th1 biomarkers CXCL9, CXCL10, and interferon gamma in lesional vs nonlesional scalp in patients with FFA. 

When biopsies at the end of 12 weeks in the double-blind phase of the study were compared with the baseline biopsies, researchers found a decrease in expression of the three local inflammation markers in all patients receiving the JAKi, but not in those receiving the vehicle cream. In this small patient sample, only the reduction in expression of CXCL9, a cytokine known for differentiation and promotion of leukocytes, reached statistical significance (P < .05).

But in an analysis involving the expression of multiple genes, “lesions treated with delgocitinib had a 4% improvement in normalization toward a nonlesional transcriptomic profile, while patients treated with vehicle had a 33% worsening,” Senna reported. The difference was highly significant (P < .001).

Furthermore, the decrease in total Lichen Planopilaris Activity Index and FFA severity scores were numerically and statistically greater (P = .023) in the active-treatment arm than in the vehicle arm by the end of the double-blind part of the trial, she said.

On trichoscopy, there was an increased number of hairs and follicular units at 12 weeks relative to baseline among those treated with topical delgocitinib but a reduction in those treated with vehicle.
 

JAKi Patients Gained Hair, Vehicle Patients Lost Hair

On the basis of hair count per square centimeter from baseline, delgocitinib-treated patients gained on average of seven hairs whereas vehicle recipients lost an average of 11 hairs at 24 weeks, Senna reported.

Patients originally treated with vehicle did improve in most outcome measures in the open-label extension of the experimental treatment after crossover, but they did not catch up to those initially randomized to delgocitinib because of further accrual of favorable changes in the active-treatment group over time.

“There were no adverse events associated with active therapy or vehicle, including application-site reactions,” Senna said. The one between-group difference was a higher rate of COVID-19, but this was greater in the control arm.

All 30 of the participants in this study were women, and all had moderate to severe disease at enrollment. The median age was 64 years. Because of the predominant population at the hair loss center, all but one of the participants were White, and one participant was Asian. 

Characterizing FFA as “devastating and disfiguring,” Senna, who specializes in the care of alopecia, noted that this a difficult disease to control with the off-label strategies that are now used. The slow progress to identify treatments for FFA is illustrated by the fact that only one other double-blind and randomized trial has ever been conducted in FFA, she said.
 

Exploratory Study Supports Anecdotal Experience

On the basis of prior anecdotal experience with JAKi treatment for FFA, Senna said, “I do think that it is possible to get largely clear skin with this therapy.” However, she is now hoping for definitive trials to better characterize the efficacy and safety of oral and topical therapies, perhaps used sequentially to maintain clinical improvement.

In light of the limited current options, Menno de Rie, MD, PhD, professor of dermatology at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, called these data “very inspiring and hopeful.” He suggested the promise of this therapy was reinforced by the upward trajectory of the biomarkers and clinical improvement over the study period. 

“Any improvement in treatment options would be welcome, because we do not [have] any reliable therapies for this condition,” de Rie, who was not an investigator, said in an interview after the presentation. 

Ultimately, Senna said, once effective therapy is established, the goal will be to start as early as possible in the disease process. She noted that there is evidence that prompt therapy can reverse the disorder, not just prevent progression.

“If you can get to the hair follicles before the point of no return, there is [a] chance [of] follicular rescue,” she said.

Delgocitinib cream (Anzupgo) was approved in Europe for treating chronic hand eczema in late September and is under review for the same indication in the United States. 

Senna has financial relationships with Arena, Concert, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Leo Pharma, which provided funding for this study. de Rie reported no potential conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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For frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), a disease with no approved therapies, topical delgocitinib attenuated inflammation and generated hair regrowth in women in a controlled phase 2a trial.

“This is an exciting avenue for FFA if the data are recapitulated in a larger population. It could be an important new treatment option,” said Maryanne Senna, MD, director at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center’s Hair Loss Center of Excellence, Burlington, Massachusetts, and assistant dermatology professor at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

In a design characterized as “exploratory,” the trial had two parts: a randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled intervention for 12 weeks, followed by an open-label extension of topical delgocitinib for all participants for another 12 weeks. 

The primary efficacy endpoint was change in the molecular signature of FFA inflammation at 12 weeks. Clinical improvement was monitored with both trichoscopic images capturing the numbers of hairs and follicular units at 12 weeks and clinical severity scores through week 24. In a topical cream formulation, the Janus kinase inhibitor (JAKi) delgocitinib was associated with favorable activity for both. 
 

Some Hair Regrowth for All

“At 24 weeks, all patients achieved some degree of hair regrowth and a stabilization of disease based on hairline measurements,” Senna reported in a late-breaking news session at the 2024 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress

On the clinical endpoints, Senna noted an upward trajectory in clinical improvement at the completion of the study.

The 30 participants were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive delgocitinib cream in a concentration of 20 mg/g or vehicle cream applied twice daily for 12 weeks. At the end of this double-blind period, patients on vehicle were crossed over to the active therapy, and all patients were monitored for another 12 weeks in an open-label extension. 

The change from baseline in FFA biomarkers was selected as the primary endpoint based on previous work showing up-regulation in the expression of the Th1 biomarkers CXCL9, CXCL10, and interferon gamma in lesional vs nonlesional scalp in patients with FFA. 

When biopsies at the end of 12 weeks in the double-blind phase of the study were compared with the baseline biopsies, researchers found a decrease in expression of the three local inflammation markers in all patients receiving the JAKi, but not in those receiving the vehicle cream. In this small patient sample, only the reduction in expression of CXCL9, a cytokine known for differentiation and promotion of leukocytes, reached statistical significance (P < .05).

But in an analysis involving the expression of multiple genes, “lesions treated with delgocitinib had a 4% improvement in normalization toward a nonlesional transcriptomic profile, while patients treated with vehicle had a 33% worsening,” Senna reported. The difference was highly significant (P < .001).

Furthermore, the decrease in total Lichen Planopilaris Activity Index and FFA severity scores were numerically and statistically greater (P = .023) in the active-treatment arm than in the vehicle arm by the end of the double-blind part of the trial, she said.

On trichoscopy, there was an increased number of hairs and follicular units at 12 weeks relative to baseline among those treated with topical delgocitinib but a reduction in those treated with vehicle.
 

JAKi Patients Gained Hair, Vehicle Patients Lost Hair

On the basis of hair count per square centimeter from baseline, delgocitinib-treated patients gained on average of seven hairs whereas vehicle recipients lost an average of 11 hairs at 24 weeks, Senna reported.

Patients originally treated with vehicle did improve in most outcome measures in the open-label extension of the experimental treatment after crossover, but they did not catch up to those initially randomized to delgocitinib because of further accrual of favorable changes in the active-treatment group over time.

“There were no adverse events associated with active therapy or vehicle, including application-site reactions,” Senna said. The one between-group difference was a higher rate of COVID-19, but this was greater in the control arm.

All 30 of the participants in this study were women, and all had moderate to severe disease at enrollment. The median age was 64 years. Because of the predominant population at the hair loss center, all but one of the participants were White, and one participant was Asian. 

Characterizing FFA as “devastating and disfiguring,” Senna, who specializes in the care of alopecia, noted that this a difficult disease to control with the off-label strategies that are now used. The slow progress to identify treatments for FFA is illustrated by the fact that only one other double-blind and randomized trial has ever been conducted in FFA, she said.
 

Exploratory Study Supports Anecdotal Experience

On the basis of prior anecdotal experience with JAKi treatment for FFA, Senna said, “I do think that it is possible to get largely clear skin with this therapy.” However, she is now hoping for definitive trials to better characterize the efficacy and safety of oral and topical therapies, perhaps used sequentially to maintain clinical improvement.

In light of the limited current options, Menno de Rie, MD, PhD, professor of dermatology at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, called these data “very inspiring and hopeful.” He suggested the promise of this therapy was reinforced by the upward trajectory of the biomarkers and clinical improvement over the study period. 

“Any improvement in treatment options would be welcome, because we do not [have] any reliable therapies for this condition,” de Rie, who was not an investigator, said in an interview after the presentation. 

Ultimately, Senna said, once effective therapy is established, the goal will be to start as early as possible in the disease process. She noted that there is evidence that prompt therapy can reverse the disorder, not just prevent progression.

“If you can get to the hair follicles before the point of no return, there is [a] chance [of] follicular rescue,” she said.

Delgocitinib cream (Anzupgo) was approved in Europe for treating chronic hand eczema in late September and is under review for the same indication in the United States. 

Senna has financial relationships with Arena, Concert, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Leo Pharma, which provided funding for this study. de Rie reported no potential conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

For frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), a disease with no approved therapies, topical delgocitinib attenuated inflammation and generated hair regrowth in women in a controlled phase 2a trial.

“This is an exciting avenue for FFA if the data are recapitulated in a larger population. It could be an important new treatment option,” said Maryanne Senna, MD, director at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center’s Hair Loss Center of Excellence, Burlington, Massachusetts, and assistant dermatology professor at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

In a design characterized as “exploratory,” the trial had two parts: a randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled intervention for 12 weeks, followed by an open-label extension of topical delgocitinib for all participants for another 12 weeks. 

The primary efficacy endpoint was change in the molecular signature of FFA inflammation at 12 weeks. Clinical improvement was monitored with both trichoscopic images capturing the numbers of hairs and follicular units at 12 weeks and clinical severity scores through week 24. In a topical cream formulation, the Janus kinase inhibitor (JAKi) delgocitinib was associated with favorable activity for both. 
 

Some Hair Regrowth for All

“At 24 weeks, all patients achieved some degree of hair regrowth and a stabilization of disease based on hairline measurements,” Senna reported in a late-breaking news session at the 2024 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress

On the clinical endpoints, Senna noted an upward trajectory in clinical improvement at the completion of the study.

The 30 participants were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive delgocitinib cream in a concentration of 20 mg/g or vehicle cream applied twice daily for 12 weeks. At the end of this double-blind period, patients on vehicle were crossed over to the active therapy, and all patients were monitored for another 12 weeks in an open-label extension. 

The change from baseline in FFA biomarkers was selected as the primary endpoint based on previous work showing up-regulation in the expression of the Th1 biomarkers CXCL9, CXCL10, and interferon gamma in lesional vs nonlesional scalp in patients with FFA. 

When biopsies at the end of 12 weeks in the double-blind phase of the study were compared with the baseline biopsies, researchers found a decrease in expression of the three local inflammation markers in all patients receiving the JAKi, but not in those receiving the vehicle cream. In this small patient sample, only the reduction in expression of CXCL9, a cytokine known for differentiation and promotion of leukocytes, reached statistical significance (P < .05).

But in an analysis involving the expression of multiple genes, “lesions treated with delgocitinib had a 4% improvement in normalization toward a nonlesional transcriptomic profile, while patients treated with vehicle had a 33% worsening,” Senna reported. The difference was highly significant (P < .001).

Furthermore, the decrease in total Lichen Planopilaris Activity Index and FFA severity scores were numerically and statistically greater (P = .023) in the active-treatment arm than in the vehicle arm by the end of the double-blind part of the trial, she said.

On trichoscopy, there was an increased number of hairs and follicular units at 12 weeks relative to baseline among those treated with topical delgocitinib but a reduction in those treated with vehicle.
 

JAKi Patients Gained Hair, Vehicle Patients Lost Hair

On the basis of hair count per square centimeter from baseline, delgocitinib-treated patients gained on average of seven hairs whereas vehicle recipients lost an average of 11 hairs at 24 weeks, Senna reported.

Patients originally treated with vehicle did improve in most outcome measures in the open-label extension of the experimental treatment after crossover, but they did not catch up to those initially randomized to delgocitinib because of further accrual of favorable changes in the active-treatment group over time.

“There were no adverse events associated with active therapy or vehicle, including application-site reactions,” Senna said. The one between-group difference was a higher rate of COVID-19, but this was greater in the control arm.

All 30 of the participants in this study were women, and all had moderate to severe disease at enrollment. The median age was 64 years. Because of the predominant population at the hair loss center, all but one of the participants were White, and one participant was Asian. 

Characterizing FFA as “devastating and disfiguring,” Senna, who specializes in the care of alopecia, noted that this a difficult disease to control with the off-label strategies that are now used. The slow progress to identify treatments for FFA is illustrated by the fact that only one other double-blind and randomized trial has ever been conducted in FFA, she said.
 

Exploratory Study Supports Anecdotal Experience

On the basis of prior anecdotal experience with JAKi treatment for FFA, Senna said, “I do think that it is possible to get largely clear skin with this therapy.” However, she is now hoping for definitive trials to better characterize the efficacy and safety of oral and topical therapies, perhaps used sequentially to maintain clinical improvement.

In light of the limited current options, Menno de Rie, MD, PhD, professor of dermatology at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, called these data “very inspiring and hopeful.” He suggested the promise of this therapy was reinforced by the upward trajectory of the biomarkers and clinical improvement over the study period. 

“Any improvement in treatment options would be welcome, because we do not [have] any reliable therapies for this condition,” de Rie, who was not an investigator, said in an interview after the presentation. 

Ultimately, Senna said, once effective therapy is established, the goal will be to start as early as possible in the disease process. She noted that there is evidence that prompt therapy can reverse the disorder, not just prevent progression.

“If you can get to the hair follicles before the point of no return, there is [a] chance [of] follicular rescue,” she said.

Delgocitinib cream (Anzupgo) was approved in Europe for treating chronic hand eczema in late September and is under review for the same indication in the United States. 

Senna has financial relationships with Arena, Concert, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Leo Pharma, which provided funding for this study. de Rie reported no potential conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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