In areas of high impact, 72% of patients with scalp psoriasis and 85% with genital psoriasis treated with icotrokinra achieved site-specific clear or almost clear skin at Week 52 in Phase 3 ICONIC-TOTAL study.
Source: jnj.com
Quote:
Johnson & Johnson today announced new long-term 52-week data from the Phase 3 ICONIC-TOTAL study evaluating icotrokinra, a first-in-class investigational targeted oral peptide that precisely blocks the IL-23 receptor, in adults and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older (adolescents) with plaque psoriasis (PsO) affecting high-impact sites.
The ICONIC-TOTAL study, simultaneously evaluated adults and adolescents with at least moderate scalp, genital and/or hand/foot plaque psoriasis with ≥1% Body Surface Area (BSA) affected. Through Week 52, icotrokinra demonstrated high and durable rates of site-specific psoriasis clearance affecting all of these high-impact and difficult-to-treat areas of the body.In the smaller subset of patients with hand/foot psoriasis, treatment with icotrokinra showed a numerically higher rate of skin clearance at Week 16, which increased through Week 52 with patients achieving a hand and/or foot Physician’s Global Assessment (hf-PGA) score of 0/1 increasing from 42% to 62%.
- 72% of patients with scalp psoriasis achieved a scalp-specific Investigator’s Global Assessment (ss-IGA) 0/1 score and 57% achieved ss-IGA 0
- 85% of patients with genital psoriasis achieved a Physician’s Global Assessment of Genitalia (sPGA-G) 0/1 and 73% achieved sPGA-G 0
“Many of the patients in my practice experience significant distress when psoriasis affects sensitive areas such as the scalp, genitals, hands, and feet,” said Edward (Ted) Lain, MD, MBA Executive Director of the Austin Institute for Clinical Research in Austin, Texas, and study investigator. “The durable response rates observed in the ICONIC-TOTAL study show that icotrokinra has the potential to be a meaningful new option for effectively managing moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis long-term in both adults and adolescents.”
Overall response rates among patients treated with once daily icotrokinra were maintained through Week 52, with 67% of patients treated with icotrokinra achieving clear or almost clear skin (Investigator’s Global Assessment (IGA)f 0/1) and 44% achieving completely clear skin (IGA 0) at Week 52. The overall response rates were also comparable among patients who received icotrokinra for all 52 weeks and those who transitioned from placebo to icotrokinra at Week 16 (67% versus 68% achieved IGA 0/1, respectively). Across treatment groups, adverse event and serious adverse event rates were similar through Week 52 compared to those through Week 16, with no new safety signals identified.
“The new long-term data from ICONIC-TOTAL adds to the robust findings seen across several studies this year, including the recently reported ICONIC-LEAD 52-week data,” said Liza O’Dowd, MD, Vice President, Immunodermatology and Respiratory Disease Areas Lead, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine. “Psoriasis that affects high-impact skin sites often results in greater physical discomfort for patients due to the sensitivity of these areas. Icotrokinra is being developed with the goal of setting a new standard of treatment that offers patients the precision of a targeted therapy, high level skin clearance and favorable safety profile with the ease of a once daily pill.”
Source: jnj.com


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