Acne Vulgaris Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase IV An Evaluator-Blind Controlled Parallel-Group Study To Assess Efficacy And Safety Of Skinoren® 15% Gel And Differin® 0,1% Gel For The Treatment And Maintenance Treatment Of Facial Acne Vulgaris And Late-Type Acne In Females
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.
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.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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