World Allergy Organization Journal (Jul 2024)

Real-life management of atopic dermatitis patients with an inadequate response to on-label use of dupilumab

  • Rémi Strizzolo, MD,
  • Julien Seneschal, MD, PhD,
  • Angèle Soria, MD, PhD,
  • Delphine Staumont-Sallé, MD, PhD,
  • Sébastien Barbarot, MD, PhD,
  • Manuelle Viguier, MD, PhD,
  • Marie Jachiet, MD,
  • Audrey Nosbaum, MD, PhD,
  • Aude Clément, MD,
  • Marie Tauber, MD, PhD,
  • Stéphanie Mallet, MD,
  • Aurélie Du-Thanh, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 7
p. 100923

Abstract

Read online

In patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) showing an inadequate response to dupilumab 300mg/2weeks, few real-life studies reported the response to alternative regimen maintaining dupilumab.To assess and analyze the response to an increased dose of dupilumab or its combination with cyclosporin A (CsA), methotrexate (MTX), or itraconazole (ITRA), all adult AD patients from 7 French University Hospitals were retrospectively included if they achieved an inadequate response to dupilumab 300mg/2weeks and were subsequently treated with an increased dose of dupilumab (300mg every 7 or 10 days), or a combination of dupilumab 300mg/2weeks with CsA, MTX or ITRA. The response after 3 months, along with epidemiological, clinical, and therapeutic baseline characteristics, were collected.Overall, 68.75% of the 48 included patients achieved an improved response, including 45.8% of complete response (CR). No strategy proved significantly better. Patients showing an initial no response never achieved a further CR versus 52.4% of patients with an initial partial response (p = 0.025). Digestive intolerance and tachycardia led to MTX and ITRA discontinuation in 3 patients.Increasing the dose of dupilumab or combining it with CsA, MTX, or ITRA could be alternative and safe options, to be evaluated in further medico-economic studies.

Keywords