Phase 4
Completed N=8
A Study to Determine the Efficacy of Taclonex Topical Suspension as a Supplement to Non-biologic Systemic Therapy
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01761019 ↗Enrolled (actual)
8
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Sep 2016
Primary outcomePrimary: Investigator Global Assessment — 1.13 units on a scale
◆ Published Evidence
Emerging
1citation · ~0 / year
A Preliminary, Open Label, Single-arm Study of Calcipotriene/Betamethasone Topical Suspension as a Supplement to Non-biologic Systemic Therapy for Psoriasis.
Summary
Oral therapies for psoriasis, including methotrexate and acitretin, are often less effective when used as monotherapy (without other oral medicines or creams) than are newer biologic injected drugs. However, these oral medications are also less expensive than biologic agents and may be safer for use in some patients. The purpose of this study is to determine if adding a topical psoriasis medicine, calcipotriene/betamethasone topical suspension (Taclonex topical suspension), will improve the severity of psoriasis in patients already on methotrexate or acitretin and to determine if adding this topical suspension will reduce the desire of such patients to switch to a biologic agent to treat their psoriasis.
Linked Publications
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A Preliminary, Open Label, Single-arm Study of Calcipotriene/Betamethasone Topical Suspension as a Supplement to Non-biologic Systemic Therapy for Psoriasis.
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Investigator Global Assessment |
1.13 | — |
| SECONDARY Body Surface Area |
0.7 | — |
| SECONDARY Safety |
1 | — |
| SECONDARY Patient Satisfaction |
3.63 | — |
| SECONDARY Desire to Change to Another Systemic Therapy |
— | — |
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Subjects age 18 years and older with stable plaque psoriasis of duration of at least 6 months.
- Subject must be currently using a stable dose, with stable disease severity, of a single non-biologic systemic psoriasis medication (methotrexate or acitretin) for at least 2 months.
- Subject must be planning to continue current systemic agent, and standard of care monitoring for that medication
- All labs required for methotrexate or acitretin will be done according to standard of care.
- If a woman, before entry she must be: Postmenopausal, or practicing a highly effective method of birth control
- Women of childbearing potential must have a negative urine pregnancy test prior to randomization
- Subject must be able and willing to provide written informed consent to participate.
Exclusion Criteria
- Non-plaque psoriasis (pustular, erythrodermic, or guttate).
- Use of excluded therapies: phototherapy use currently or in the 4 weeks prior to baseline, use of more than 1 systemic therapy in the 2 months prior to baseline, use of topical steroid, tar preparation, or vitamin D analog in the 4 weeks prior to baseline.
- Subjects who are currently taking or have taken in the past 60 days, for any reason, any medication that, in the opinion of the investigator, suppressed the immune response. This may include but is not limited to systemic steroids, azathioprine, cyclosporine, FK506, mycophenolate mofetil, mycophenolic acid, etanercept, adalimumab, infliximab, ustekinumab, cimzia, or any other biologic agent targeted to any cell or cytokine in the immune system.
- Subjects with any use at any time in the past of Taclonex topical suspension or Taclonex ointment
- Subjects who are pregnant, nursing, or plan on becoming pregnant during the course of the study.
- Presence of any unstable medical or psychiatric condition that, in the opinion of the investigator, could impair subject compliance.
- Subject has any active infection within 30 days prior to baseline.
- Known or suspected disorders of calcium metabolism
- Known or suspected severe kidney or liver disease.
- Known or suspected hypersensitivity to component(s) of the investigational products.
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01761019) and the linked publication. Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication. Informational only — not medical advice.