Imagine your skin covered in thick, itchy, scaly patches that don't go away. That's the reality for people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. A new drug, bimekizumab, was recently tested in a large group of 435 adults to see if it could help clear their skin better than a placebo. The study, which ran for about 10 months, specifically looked at how many people achieved a 90% improvement in their psoriasis area and severity score after 16 weeks. The company behind the drug, UCB Biopharma, sponsored this Phase 3 trial, which is a critical step before a treatment can be considered for approval. It's important to know that the detailed results—exactly how well it worked, how many people it helped, and what side effects occurred—haven't been made public yet. So, while this represents a significant step in research, we're still waiting to see the full picture of its benefits and risks.
Can a new drug help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis?
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What this means for you:
A new psoriasis drug completed a major trial, but the detailed results are not yet available. More on Chronic Plaque Psoriasis
Phase 3 trial compares bimekizumab to placebo and ustekinumab for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis Can a new psoriasis drug outperform an established treatment?
CT.gov · Mar 30, 2026
Phase 2a study of bimekizumab in chronic plaque psoriasis reports pharmacokinetics and PASI change at Week 28 Could a new psoriasis treatment work better by targeting two inflammation sources at once?
CT.gov · Mar 30, 2026
Bimekizumab maintains complete skin clearance in 73% of psoriasis patients at 4 years Can psoriasis treatment keep skin clear for years? New data suggests it might.
· Apr 6, 2026