Treatment with oral ritlecitinib improves outcomes in patients with active nonsegmental vitiligo, without any serious adverse events over 48 weeks, results of a study have shown.
This phase IIb clinical trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of ritlecitinib, an oral Janus kinase (JAK3)/tyrosine kinase expressed in hepatocellular carcinoma (TEC) inhibitor, in patients with active nonsegmental vitiligo.
The authors randomized patients to once-daily oral ritlecitinib ±4-week loading dose (200/50 mg, 100/50 mg, 30 mg, or 10 mg) or placebo for 24 weeks (dose-ranging period). Participants then received ritlecitinib 200/50 mg daily in a 24-week extension period. Percent change from baseline in Facial-Vitiligo Area Scoring Index at week 24 was the primary efficacy endpoint.
Overall, 364 patients received treatment during the dose-ranging period. Significant differences in the primary endpoint were seen for the ritlecitinib 50-mg groups with (‒21.2 vs 2.1; p<0.001) or without (‒18.5 vs 2.1; p<0.001) a loading dose and ritlecitinib 30-mg group (‒14.6 vs 2.1; p=0.01) when compared to placebo.
Accelerated improvement was also noted in 187 patients who underwent treatment with ritlecitinib 200/50 mg in the extension period. Of note, dose-dependent trends in treatment-emergent or serious adverse events were not observed across the 48-week treatment.
The trial was limited by the exclusion of patients with stable vitiligo only.
“Vitiligo is a chronic autoimmune disorder characterized by depigmented patches of the skin,” the authors said.