Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01387048
Other study ID # BS-HAU-2011
Secondary ID 2011-000152-42
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
First received June 29, 2011
Last updated July 5, 2013
Start date August 2011
Est. completion date October 2012

Study information

Verified date July 2013
Source University of Magdeburg
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Germany: Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of Skinoren® 15% gel compared to no therapy on the maintenance of clinical therapy success in subjects with mild to moderate acne vulgaris previously treated for 3 months by a monotherapy of this substance and to assess the effect of Skinoren® 15% gel, compared to Differin® 0.1% gel on the efficacy and safety during a 9-month long-term treatment period.


Description:

Differin gel, containing adapalene 0.1%, has been used now for several years in the topical treatment of mild to moderate acne. It has comedolytic and anti-inflammatory activities,and is equally effective and less irritant than other topical retinoids. Adapalene has been shown to maintain therapeutic effect achieved after three months of monotherapy for further three months. Furthermore, its effect in maintenance therapy has been shown in several studies after initial combination with topical or systemic antimicrobials. Skinoren 15% gel (azelaic acid) is an alternative treatment affecting several pathogenetic factors of acne, which has potential in maintenance therapy due to its good tolerability and safety and missing contraindications concerning long-term treatment, which allow even use in pregnancy.

Azelaic acid (AzA; HOOC-(CH2)7-COOH) is a naturally occurring compound that interferes with acne pathogenesis by virtue of its antikeratinizing, antibacterial, and anti-inflammatory properties. Vehicle-controlled studies have verified that AzA exercises a significant and clinically relevant effect on both non-inflammatory and inflammatory acne lesions. In the treatment of moderate to severe acne, 20 percent AzA cream may be favorably combined with minocycline (90 percent good and excellent results), and may contribute towards reducing recurrences following discontinuation of systemic therapy (maintenance therapy with AzA cream). Particular advantages of AzA therapy include its favorable safety and side effect profile. It is non-teratogenic, is not associated with systemic adverse events or photodynamic reactions, exhibits excellent local tolerability, and does not induce resistance in Propionibacterium acnes. The 15 % azelaic acid gel has recently proven efficacy in a maintenance treatment of papulopustular rosacea after a combination treatment with oral doxycycline.

Mild to moderate acne vulgaris is defined as global severity of 2 through 4, according to the Investigator´s Static Global Assessment (ISGA) and Leeds Revised Acne Grading Scale from 2 trough 7.This inclusion criterion corresponds to the clinical grades usually treated with topical anti-acne therapies.

The non-treatment group during the maintenance phase helps to demonstrate the efficacy of Skinoren 15% gel in a maintenance treatment, thereby corroborating the necessity for maintenance therapy reflecting acne as a chronic disease.

Acne lesion counting has been used widely in the evaluation of new acne treatments as a change in facial acne lesions counts over time in an individual patient could reflect a true change. However, lesion counts are more valid in greater patient populations as planned in this study. Therefore, the lesion counts are defined as secondary efficacy criteria except during the maintenance phase for the population treated with azelaic acid. As described before, microcomedones are considered as precursor lesion. Moreover, their counts are constantly reduced during acne treatment and precede the clinical relapse. Therefore, microcomedones counts will be used in this trial as a marker of maintenance of therapeutic effect achieved during initial treatment phase.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 60
Est. completion date October 2012
Est. primary completion date August 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Female
Age group 18 Years to 45 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

1. Female subjects between 18 and 45 years of age, inclusive, in good general health.

2. Female Subjects of childbearing potential using effective contraceptional methods must have been taking the same type of birth control for at least 6 months prior to entering the study and must not change type of birth control during the study. The subject´s should be willing to perform UPT in decision by physician, if indicated.

3. Subjects with mild to moderate acne vulgaris or late-type acne with global facial severity grade 2 through 4 according to the "Investigator´s Static Global Assessment (ISGA)" and B-G (2-7) according to the "Leeds revised acne grading system".

4. Subjects with visible microcomedones on the Cyanoacrylate strip taken on the forehead.

5. Subjects must read and sign the approved Informed Consent Form (and any local or national authorized requirements )prior to any participation in the study. Subjects must be willing and capable of cooperating to the extent and degree required by the protocol (including refraining from the use of cosmetics and ointments during the course of treatment). Subject must be able to follow all study procedures, attend all schedule visits, and complete the study successfully.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Female subjects who are pregnant, trying to become or willing to become pregnant, or who are lactating.

2. Subjects who have any clinically relevant finding at their screening physical examination or medical history such as severe systemic diseases or diseases of the facial skin other than acne vulgaris (eg, acne conglobata, acne fulminans, secondary-acne or severe nodulocystic acne requiring treatment with oral isotretinoin).

3. Subjects who have a known hypersensitivity or previous allergic reaction to any of the active components of the study medication.

4. Subjects who are using and not willing to refrain from the following other types of facial products: astringents, toners, abradants, facials, peels containing glycolic or other acids, masks, washes or soaps.

5. Subjects who have used topical corticosteroids on the face or systemic corticosteroids within the past 2 weeks.

6. Subjects who have used topical antibiotics on the face or systemic antibiotics (only penicillin allowed) within the last 2 weeks.

7. Subjects who have used topical anti-acne medications within the past 2 weeks.

8. Subjects who have used systemic retinoids within the past 6 months.

9. Subjects who use medications that are reported to exacerbate acne

10. Subjects who are using drugs known to be photosensitizers because of the possibility of increased phototoxicity.

11. Subjects who have had a facial procedure performed by an esthetician, beautician, physician, nurse, or other practitioner, within the last 4 weeks.

12. Subjects who planned intensive UV exposure during study

13. Subjects who participated in another investigational drug or device research study within 30 days of enrollment.

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
skinoren
gel 15%, twice daily, 36 weeks
differin
0.1% gel, once daily in the evening
skinoren
12 weeks treatment, the following 24 months only observation

Locations

Country Name City State
Germany Clinic for Dermatology and Vereology, Central Hospital Magdeburg Magdeburg Saxony-Anhalt

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Magdeburg Bayer

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Germany, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Superiority of Skinoren 15% Gel Superiority of Skinoren 15% Gel-group over the observational group in the maintanance phase. Change of Global Severity Grades (ISGA and Leeds) 36 weeks Yes
Primary Non-inferiority of Skinoren 15 % gel over the Differin 0.1% gel Non-inferiority of Skinoren 15% Gel over the current "gold standard" Differin 0.1% gel in the long-term-treatment period: Change of Global severity grades 36 weeks Yes
Secondary - Change of non-inflammatory, inflammatory and total lesions at all visits. - Secondary Endpoints:
Microcomedone count changes from week 12-36
36 weeks Yes
Secondary Change of non-inflammatory, inflammatory and total lesions at all visits Subjects efficacy assessment 36 weeks Yes
Secondary change of non-inflammatory, inflammatory and total lesions at all visits subjects tolerability assessment 36 weeks Yes
Secondary Change of non-inflammatory, inflammatory and total lesions at all visits Subjects DLQI assessment 36 weeks Yes
Secondary change of non-inflammatory, inflammatory and total lesions at all visits Investigators tolerability assessment 36 weeks Yes
Secondary change of non-inflammatory, inflammatory and total lesions at all visits Relapse rate: Number of subjects which lose more than 50% of their initial improvement achieved at maintanance phase 36 weeks Yes
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04321070 - Bio-equivalence Study With Clinical Endpoints in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05755256 - The Impact of Probiotics on Skin Hydration in Youth With Mild Acne Phase 2
Completed NCT05131373 - Safety, Tolerability, and Immunogenicity of ORI-A-ce001 for the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 1
Completed NCT01445301 - Study STF115287, a Clinical Confirmation Study of GSK2585823 in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris in Japanese Subjects Phase 3
Completed NCT03303170 - Non-Significant Risk Study of Sebacia Microparticles in the Treatment of Facial Acne Vulgaris N/A
Completed NCT04698239 - Clinical Evaluation of the Safety and Benefits of the Milesman 445 nm Blue Laser on Inflammatory Acne Lesions. N/A
Completed NCT02886715 - A Study Comparing Tazarotene Cream 0.1% to TAZORAC® (Tazarotene) Cream 0.1% and Both to a Placebo Control in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 3
Terminated NCT02924428 - Venus Versa Diamondpolar Applicator Treatment Followed by AC Dual Applicator Treatment for Facial Acne Vulgaris N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02491060 - A Study Comparing the Efficacy and Safety of IDP-121 and IDP-121 Vehicle Lotion in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT02535871 - A Study Comparing the Efficacy and Safety of IDP-121 and IDP-121 Vehicle Lotion in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT02525822 - Study to Compare the Safety and Efficacy of IDP-123 Lotion to Tazorac Cream in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 2
Completed NCT02709902 - Study Comparing Adapalene/BP Gel to EPIDUO® FORTE and Both to a Placebo Control in Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 1
Completed NCT02913001 - The Effect of a Low Glycemic Load Diet on Hormonal Markers Associated With Acne N/A
Completed NCT02250430 - A Phase 1 Study Assessing Local Cutaneous Effects of SB204 Phase 1
Completed NCT01694810 - Cutaneous Tolerability and Safety of NVN1000 Topical Gel in Healthy Volunteers Phase 1
Completed NCT01769664 - A Study Comparing Clindamycin 1%/Benzoyl Peroxide 5% Topical Gel to Duac® Topical Gel in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris Phase 1
Completed NCT01727440 - Identifying the Genetic Predictors of Severe Acne Vulgaris and the Outcome of Oral Isotretinoin Treatment N/A
Completed NCT01194375 - A Dose-Ranging Study Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of IDP-107 in Patients With Acne Vulgaris Phase 2
Completed NCT01706250 - U0289-401: Eight Week, Split-face, Study to Determine and Compare the Efficacy and Tolerability of MAXCLARITY™ II to PROACTIV™ Phase 4
Completed NCT00991198 - The Role of Topically Dissolved Oxygen (TDO) to Ameliorate Signs of Photodamage Phase 2