Tapinarof cream effective regardless of AD severity, age in two trials

15 Mar 2024
Elaine Soliven
Elaine Soliven
Elaine Soliven
Elaine Soliven
Tapinarof cream effective regardless of AD severity, age in two trials

Once-daily application of tapinarof cream 1% significantly improves the Eczema Area Severity Index (EASI) score in patients with atopic dermatitis (AD), regardless of their disease severity or age, according to the pivotal phase III ADORING 1 and 2 trials presented at AAAAI 2024.

Tapinarof cream 1%, a nonsteroidal, topical aryl hydrocarbon receptor agonist, is FDA-approved for the treatment of plaque psoriasis in adults, according to Dr Luz Fonacier from NYU Long Island School of Medicine in Mineola, New York, US.

The ADORING 1 and 2 phase III studies enrolled 407 and 406 patients with moderate-to-severe AD, respectively, with a mean baseline EASI score of 12.2─13.5. Approximately 80 percent of the participants were children aged 2–17 years. The participants were randomized in a 2:1 ratio to receive either tapinarof cream 1% (ADORING 1: n=270, ADORING 2: n=271) or vehicle (ADORING 1: n=137, ADORING 2: n=135) once daily for 8 weeks.

By week 8, a significantly higher percentage of patients treated with tapinarof cream 1% achieved a ≥75 percent improvement in EASI score (EASI75) from baseline in both the ADORING 1 (55.8 percent vs 22.9 percent; p<0.0001) and ADORING 2 studies (59.1 percent vs 21.2 percent; p<0.0001) compared with the vehicle group. [AAAAI 2024, abstract 014]

Significantly more tapinarof- vs vehicle-treated patients also achieved higher EASI75 response rates, regardless of whether they had moderate (58.8 percent vs 25.7 percent [ADORING 1] and 59.9 percent vs 24.3 percent [ADORING 2]) or severe AD (54.5 percent vs 6.9 percent [ADORING 1] and 69.3 percent vs 7.6 percent [ADORING 2]).

Furthermore, across all age subgroups, patients who received tapinarof cream consistently demonstrated significantly higher EASI75 response rates than those who received vehicle.

In the children cohort, treatment with tapinarof cream 1% resulted in a higher EASI75 response rate at week 8 among those aged 2–6 years (72.1 percent vs 17 percent [ADORING 1] and 68.1 percent vs 24.8 percent [ADORING 2]), 7–11 years (52.1 percent vs 28 percent [ADORING 1] and 55.3 percent vs 35.1 percent [ADORING 2]), and 12–17 years (54.3 percent vs 24.5 percent [ADORING 1] and 68.1 percent vs 13.5 percent [ADORING 2]) compared with vehicle.

Similarly, among the adult cohort (aged ≥18 years), the EASI75 response rate was higher in the tapinarof arm than in the vehicle arm (52.5 percent vs 26.2 percent [ADORING 1] and 49.2 percent vs 15.1 percent [ADORING 2]).

Safety profile

The most common treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) observed were folliculitis, headache, and nasopharyngitis, but all were considered mild or moderate in severity.

There was a lower rate of TEAEs that led to trial discontinuations with tapinarof compared with vehicle in ADORING 1 (1.9 percent vs 3.6 percent) and ADORING 2 (1.5 percent vs 3.0 percent).

Tapinarof was well tolerated, and TEAEs were consistent with those observed in previous trials, Fonacier noted.

“Overall, tapinarof cream 1% once daily demonstrated consistent, clinically meaningful efficacy regardless of AD severity, or the age of the patient at baseline, in two large well-controlled phase III trials,” said Fonacier.

“Tapinarof [has] the potential for use in the treatment of AD in patients down to 2 years of age without restrictions on duration, extent, or sites of application,” she noted.