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Werfel, T.; Irvine, A. D.; Bangert, C.; Seneschal, Julien ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1139-0908; Grond, S.; Cardillo, T.; Brinker, D.; Zhong, J.; Riedl, E. und Wollenberg, Andreas ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0177-8722 (2022): An integrated analysis of herpes virus infections from eight randomized clinical studies of baricitinib in adults with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis. In: Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, Bd. 36, Nr. 9: S. 1486-1496 [PDF, 771kB]

Abstract

Background Atopic dermatitis (AD) is associated with an increased risk for viral infections including those caused by herpes simplex virus and varicella zoster virus. Objectives This study examined treatment-emergent (TE) herpes simplex infection including eczema herpeticum (EH), and herpes zoster (HZ), in adult patients with AD receiving >= 1 dose of baricitinib (BARI), an oral selective inhibitor of Janus kinase 1/2. Methods We evaluated data from six double-blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled (PC) trials and two long-term extension studies, within three analysis sets: PC, 2-4-mg BARI extended and All-BARI-AD. Frequency, incidence rate (IR)/100 person-years (PYs) and clinical characteristics of TE-herpes simplex, EH and HZ were reported. Results In the All-BARI-AD dataset (n = 2531;2247 PYs), herpes simplex was reported in 8.9% of patients (n = 224;IR = 10.3). Most herpes simplex events were rated as mild or moderate (93.3%), rarely led to permanent discontinuation (2.2%) and presented mostly as oral/perioral herpes simplex (51.3%). TE-EH occurred at a low frequency (All-BARI-AD 1.7% n = 43;IR = 2.0) and were reported in 0.5%, 0.2% and 1.4% of patients receiving placebo, 2-mg or 4-mg BARI respectively. In the All-BARI-AD dataset, most events were investigator-rated as mild/moderate (79.1%), affected <= 2% of the body surface area (74.2%) and occurred as single events (88.4%). Serious TE-EH (n = 11) occurred exclusively in patients with poor disease control (vIGA-AD (TM) score >= 3) at infection onset. TE-HZ was reported in 2.1% of BARI patients (n = 53;IR = 2.3), without a dose relationship during the PC period (IR = 2.7 and IR = 0.0) or the extended dataset (IR = 3.7 and IR = 1.7) for 2- or 4-mg BARI respectively. Conclusions TE-herpes simplex was common, while occurrence of EH was uncommon. Most events of EH were localized with involvement of a small BSA and were linked to poor disease control. Events of HZ were rare in the PC dataset and without a dose dependent increase in frequency.

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