
FDA Approves Ruxolitinib Cream as First Repigmentation Therapy for Vitiligo
Ruxolitinib (Opzelura) cream is the first and only FDA-approved treatment for repigmentation in patients with vitiligo.
FDA has approved ruxolitinib (Opzelura) cream 1.5% for the treatment of nonsegmental
This is the first therapy to receive FDA approval for repigmentation in patients with vitiligo. Approval is based on
Findings of the primary analysis at week 24 showed that a significantly greater proportion of patients randomized to 1.5% ruxolitinib cream twice daily (BID) achieved the primary and secondary end points vs vehicle BID, including a greater than or equal to 75% improvement from baseline in the facial Vitiligo Area Scoring Index (F-VASI75) and greater than or equal to 50% improvement from baseline in total body VASI (T-VASI50).
Further data from a 28-week treatment extension of the initial 24-week TRuE-V1 and TRuE-V2 studies presented as a late-breaking session at the
These efficacy data included greater proportions of patients at week 52 vs week 24 achieving F-VASI75 (50% vs 29.9%), greater than or equal to 50% improvement from baseline in the F-VASI (F-VASI50) (75% vs 51%), greater than or equal to 90% improvement from baseline in the F-VASI (F-VASI90) (30% vs 15%), T-VASI50, Vitiligo Noticeability Scale (VNS) response, and improvement on percentage change from baseline in facial BSA.
Patients who were switched from vehicle BID to ruxolitinib cream bid for the 28-week treatment extension were also shown to exhibit efficacy data consistent with week 24 data in patients who were randomized to the intervention group from baseline. Incyte's statement noted that satisfactory patient response with ruxolitinib cream may require treatment for more than 24 weeks.
“Vitiligo is an immune-mediated disease that can be unpredictable, making it particularly difficult to treat,” David Rosmarin, MD, vice chair of Research and Education, Department of Dermatology, Tufts Medical Center, said in the statement.
“There have been no FDA-approved therapies available to date and the approval of Opzelura therefore marks a significant milestone. I welcome a medical treatment that helps my patients with nonsegmental vitiligo who are interested in potentially reversing the depigmentation caused by their disease.”
The most common adverse reactions associated with ruxolitinib cream included application site acne, application site pruritus, nasopharyngitis, headache, urinary tract infection, application site erythema, and pyrexia. The labeling for the drug also has a Boxed Warning for serious infections, mortality, malignancy, major adverse cardiovascular events, and thrombosis.
This is the second indication for ruxolitinib cream which was approved by the FDA in September 2021 for the topical short-term and noncontinuous chronic treatment of mild to moderate
Ruxolitinib cream serves as the only topical formulation of a Janus kinase inhibitor approved in the United States.
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