Upadacitinib

Clinical trials are investigating Upadacitinib in many diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, atopic dermatitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and more. These studies look at safety, effectiveness, and long-term outcomes in adults, adolescents, and some children. They also compare Upadacitinib with placebo or other treatments.

Table of Contents

Trial overview

The trial data show that Upadacitinib is being studied in many different diseases, mostly in inflammatory and immune-related conditions.[1] Most listed studies are Phase 3 trials, which usually test a treatment in larger groups and compare it with placebo or another active treatment.[1] The studies are designed to measure both how well the treatment works and how safe it is over time.[1]

Conditions studied

The trials cover a wide range of conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, atopic dermatitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, systemic lupus erythematosus, hidradenitis suppurativa, alopecia areata, vitiligo, psoriatic arthritis, axial spondyloarthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, giant cell arteritis, long Covid, and some muscle and skin diseases such as lichen planus and lichen planopilaris.[1]

Some trials focus on one condition only, while others study related groups together, such as psoriatic arthritis and axial spondyloarthritis, or different rheumatic diseases in people who are already taking immune-suppressing treatment.[1]

Who can participate

Who can join depends on the trial.[1] Some studies include adults only, while others include adolescents, and a few include children such as those with pediatric atopic dermatitis, pediatric ulcerative colitis, pediatric Crohn’s disease, or juvenile idiopathic arthritis.[1]

Many trials look for people with moderate to severe disease, meaning the illness is strong enough that extra treatment is needed.[1] Some studies also require people to have had an inadequate response to a previous treatment, or to be candidates for systemic therapy, which means treatment that works through the whole body rather than only on the skin or one joint area.[1]

Several rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis studies also include people who are already in low disease activity or remission and then test whether treatment can be safely reduced without losing disease control.[1]

Study phases and designs

Most of the studies are Phase 3 trials, including large randomized studies in atopic dermatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, lupus, hidradenitis suppurativa, vitiligo, and other conditions.[1] There is also a Phase 2 study in Crohn’s disease and a Phase 1 study in polyarticular course juvenile idiopathic arthritis, which focuses more on early safety and how the drug behaves in the body.[1]

Many studies are randomized, meaning participants are assigned by chance to different treatment groups.[1] Some are double-blind, which means neither the participant nor the study team knows which treatment is given during the blinded part.[1] Several studies use placebo, while others compare Upadacitinib with active treatments such as adalimumab, dupilumab, tocilizumab, vedolizumab, or corticosteroid-based regimens.[1]

Main endpoints and outcomes

The main outcomes differ by disease, but they usually measure improvement in symptoms or signs of disease.[1] In skin disease trials, common endpoints include vIGA-AD, EASI, EASI 75, EASI 90, SALT score, T-VASI, F-VASI, and HiSCR 50.[1]

In joint and autoimmune disease trials, common endpoints include ACR20, DAS28-CRP, BICLA response, minimal disease activity, and low disease activity measures such as CDAI, PASDAS, or ASDAS.[1] In bowel disease trials, outcomes include clinical remission, endoscopic response, and endoscopic remission, which are based on symptoms and camera-based examination of the bowel.[1]

Some studies also measure special outcomes, such as vaccine immune response, pharmacokinetics (how the drug moves through the body), MRI inflammation scores, pain processing in the brain, or the number of hospitalizations and surgeries over time.[1]

Selected trials in more detail

Atopic dermatitis trials are among the largest studies in the data.[1] Measure Up 1 and Measure Up 2 studied adolescents and adults with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis, while AD Up studied Upadacitinib together with topical corticosteroids, and another study examined children from 2 to less than 12 years of age compared with dupilumab.[1] These trials mainly measured skin improvement at Week 16, such as vIGA-AD 0 or 1 and EASI 75.[1]

Rheumatoid arthritis trials compared Upadacitinib with placebo and with adalimumab in adults who had not responded well to methotrexate or to a TNF inhibitor, which is a type of immune treatment.[1] The main results included ACR20, clinical remission, and DAS28-CRP, which measure joint swelling, pain, and inflammation.[1] Some rheumatoid arthritis studies also tested whether people in low disease activity could reduce JAK inhibitor treatment without losing control of the disease.[1]

Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis trials looked at both induction and maintenance treatment, as well as long-term extension studies.[1] The bowel disease studies measured clinical remission, endoscopic response, and long-term safety, including hospitalizations and surgeries in some studies.[1] Pediatric Crohn’s disease and pediatric ulcerative colitis studies also show that younger patients are being studied in this research program.[1]

Other important studies include systemic lupus erythematosus, hidradenitis suppurativa, alopecia areata, vitiligo, psoriatic arthritis, axial spondyloarthritis, giant cell arteritis, and juvenile idiopathic arthritis.[1] These studies use different endpoints based on the disease, such as BICLA response in lupus, HiSCR 50 in hidradenitis suppurativa, SALT score in alopecia areata, and MRI inflammation scores in axial disease.[1]

Special populations and long-term studies

Some trials focus on special groups, such as children, adolescents, or people with disease that has not improved enough with earlier treatment.[1] Others focus on long-term follow-up, including maintenance studies and long-term extension studies, where researchers continue to watch safety and disease control after the first treatment period.[1]

There is also a trial in immunosuppressed people with rheumatic diseases that looks at the immune response to the recombinant zoster vaccine, which is a vaccine against shingles.[1] This study measures antibody and T-cell responses after vaccination, showing that some Upadacitinib research is not only about disease control but also about how the immune system responds during treatment.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
2022-502938-30-00 Phase 3 Moderate and severe atopic dermatitis Completed 912
2022-502937-24-00 Phase 3 Atopic dermatitis Authorised 1604
NCT06012240 Phase 3 Severe alopecia areata Authorised 1529
NCT02629159 Phase 3 Rheumatoid arthritis Authorised 1521
NCT05889182 Phase 3 Hidradenitis suppurativa Authorised 1328
NCT05843643 Phase 3 Systemic lupus erythematosus Authorised 1007
NCT03345823 Phase 3 Crohn’s disease Authorised 976
2022-502936-38-00 Phase 3 Moderate to severe atopic dermatitis Completed 918
2022-501788-41-00 Phase 3 Ulcerative colitis Authorised 127
2022-501599-25-00 Phase 3 Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis Authorised 98
NCT03725007 Phase 1 Polyarticular course juvenile idiopathic arthritis Authorised 124
NCT06332534 Phase 3 Pediatric Crohn’s disease Authorised 137
NCT06118411 Phase 3 Non-segmental vitiligo Authorised 620
NCT07018206 Phase 3 Acute anterior uveitis with axial spondyloarthritis Authorised 200
2024-518190-34-00 Phase 3 Rheumatic disease Authorised 60

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Upadacitinib

  • A Study of Upadacitinib for Adults with Moderate to Severe Atopic Dermatitis Who Did Not Respond Well Enough to Dupilumab Treatment

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Italy Romania Spain
  • Study of Janus kinase inhibitor dose reduction in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis and axial spondyloarthritis who have achieved low disease activity

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    The Netherlands
  • Study on the Effects of Upadacitinib for Patients with Active Psoriatic Arthritis and Axial Spondyloarthritis

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Poland
  • Study on Immune Response to Recombinant Zoster Vaccine in Rheumatic Disease Patients Using Baricitinib, Tofacitinib, or Methotrexate

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study on the Effectiveness and Safety of Vedolizumab and Upadacitinib in Adults with Moderate to Severe Crohn’s Disease

    Recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria Belgium Croatia Czechia Denmark France +12
  • Study on Upadacitinib for Children with Moderate to Severe Crohn’s Disease

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Belgium Bulgaria France Greece Italy Poland +1
  • Study on Upadacitinib for Patients with Idiopathic Inflammatory Myopathies After Stopping IVIG

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria
  • Study on Reducing JAK Inhibitor Doses in Patients with Low Disease Activity in Rheumatoid Arthritis Using Tofacitinib and Drug Combination

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study on Transmural Healing in Patients with Moderate to Severe Crohn’s Disease Using Upadacitinib and Drug Combination

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Belgium Denmark France Germany Italy The Netherlands +2
  • Study on Upadacitinib for Adults and Adolescents with Moderate to Severe Hidradenitis Suppurativa After Anti-TNF Therapy Failure

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Czechia Finland +12

Glossary

  • Clinical trial: A research study in people that tests a treatment, procedure, or strategy to see if it is safe and works.
  • Phase 1: An early study phase that often looks at how a treatment behaves in the body and checks safety and tolerability in a small group.
  • Phase 2: A study phase that looks more closely at whether the treatment may work and continues safety testing.
  • Phase 3: A later study phase with larger groups of patients that compares treatments and measures effectiveness and safety.
  • Placebo: A look-alike treatment with no active medicine, used to compare results fairly.
  • Remission: A period when disease signs and symptoms are very low or absent.
  • Efficacy: How well a treatment works in a study.
  • Safety: How well a treatment is tolerated and whether unwanted effects are being watched for.
  • Primary endpoint: The main result a study uses to decide whether the treatment works as planned.
  • Enrollment: The number of people planned or included in a study.

References

  1. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/2024-518190-34-00