Apremilast

Clinical trials investigating Apremilast are studying how well it works and how safe it is in different patient groups. The trials include children and adults with psoriatic arthritis, juvenile psoriatic arthritis, Behçet’s disease with oral ulcers, recurrent aphthous stomatitis, and epidermolysis bullosa simplex.

Table of Contents

Trial overview

The clinical trial data for Apremilast show studies in several inflammatory diseases, mainly psoriatic arthritis and conditions with painful oral ulcers.[1][2] Most of the studies are Phase 3 trials, which are larger studies that compare treatment effects in more people.[1][2] One study in epidermolysis bullosa simplex is Phase 2, which is usually an earlier study step with fewer participants.[3]

The studies include both interventional trials and long-term extension research.[4] Interventional means the researchers give a study treatment and then measure the results.[4] Some trials compare Apremilast with placebo, while others use it as an active comparator in studies of other medicines.[5][6]

Psoriatic arthritis studies

Several trials focus on psoriatic arthritis, a condition that affects both the skin and joints.[1][7] In one large Phase 3 study, adults with psoriatic arthritis who had not taken biologic medicines were enrolled, and the main result was the proportion of people reaching ACR20 at Week 16.[1] ACR20 means at least 20% improvement in arthritis symptoms.[1]

Another Phase 3 trial studied adults with psoriatic arthritis who already had stable minimal disease activity and looked at how far systemic immunosuppressive treatment could be tapered without symptoms returning.[2] This study measured minimal disease activity at 12 months and also looked at the mean PASDAS score at month 12.[2] PASDAS is a combined score that helps show how active the disease is.[2]

A separate Phase 3 study in active psoriatic arthritis compared deucravacitinib with placebo and included Apremilast as an active comparator arm.[7] The study population included people who were either biologic-naïve or had previously received TNFα inhibitor treatment.[7] The main outcome was ACR20, which measures improvement in joint disease.[7]

Skin disease studies

Apremilast also appears in several Phase 3 plaque psoriasis studies as a comparison treatment.[5][6] These trials studied people with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, which is a skin condition that causes thick, scaly patches.[5][6]

In these psoriasis studies, the main endpoints were usually sPGA 0/1 and PASI-75 at Week 16.[5][6] sPGA 0/1 means the skin was rated clear or almost clear, and PASI-75 means at least 75% improvement in the psoriasis score.[5][6] These studies were completed and included large numbers of participants, showing that Apremilast was used as a standard treatment in head-to-head comparison research.[5][6]

Two other completed Phase 3 psoriasis trials, ONWARD1 and ONWARD2, also used Apremilast placebo in the study design while testing ESK-001 against placebo.[8][9] Their shared primary endpoint was the proportion of patients reaching PASI-75 and sPGA 0/1 at Week 16.[8][9]

Oral ulcer and mouth sore studies

Some of the most patient-focused studies in this data look at oral ulcers, which are painful sores in the mouth.[4][10] One Phase 3 study enrolled children and adolescents with oral ulcers linked to Behçet’s disease and compared Apremilast with placebo through Week 12.[4] The main endpoint was the area under the curve for the number of oral ulcers from baseline to Week 12, which means the study tracked ulcer burden over time, not just at one visit.[4]

Another Phase 3 trial studied children with active juvenile psoriatic arthritis and compared Apremilast with placebo.[10] The main endpoint was ACR Pedi 30 from baseline to Week 16, which means at least 30% improvement in a child’s arthritis symptoms.[10] This study included pediatric subjects 5 to less than 18 years of age.[10]

A further Phase 3 trial studied severe recurrent aphthous stomatitis, also called severe recurrent mouth ulcers, in patients who were resistant or intolerant to colchicine.[11] The main endpoint was sustained complete response, meaning no oral ulcer at the Week 12, Week 14, and Week 16 visits.[11] This study compared Apremilast with placebo and also included racecadotril as another treatment arm.[11]

Pediatric and long-term follow-up studies

One open-label Phase 3 extension study followed children with oral ulcers associated with Behçet’s disease or with active juvenile psoriatic arthritis after they had finished earlier studies.[12] Open-label means both the researchers and the participants knew which treatment was given.[12] This study focused on long-term safety rather than short-term treatment response.[12]

The safety measures in this long-term study included adverse events, suicide risk screening with the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale, Tanner staging, body weight, height, body mass index, vital signs, and laboratory values.[12] Tanner staging is a way to assess normal physical development during puberty.[12] These details show that some Apremilast research is not only about symptom improvement but also about longer-term growth and safety in children.[12]

Another Phase 2 study looked at Apremilast in people older than 6 years with generalized epidermolysis bullosa simplex, a rare skin condition.[3] The study used a challenge-dechallenge-rechallenge design, which means treatment is given, stopped, and then started again to see whether the effect changes in a clear pattern.[3] The goal was to assess efficacy in a very small group of 20 participants.[3]

Key endpoints and what they mean

Across these trials, the main endpoints measure how much the disease improves and whether the treatment is safe to use.[1][4][11] In joint disease, the trials commonly use ACR20 or ACR Pedi 30, which are response scores showing improvement in arthritis symptoms.[1][10] In skin disease, the studies often use PASI-75 and sPGA 0/1, which help show how clear the skin becomes.[5][6]

For mouth ulcer studies, the researchers measure the number of ulcers over time or the chance of complete ulcer healing at several visits.[4][11] For long-term pediatric research, the focus shifts to safety, growth, and general health checks.[12] This mix of outcomes shows that Apremilast is being studied in both short-term efficacy trials and longer follow-up studies in children and adults.[1][12]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT04804553 Phase 3 Juvenile psoriatic arthritis Authorised 67
NCT04528082 Phase 3 Behçet’s disease with oral ulcers Authorised 60
2024-514659-13-00 Phase 3 Severe recurrent aphthous stomatitis Authorised 134
2023-508794-83-00 Phase 2 Epidermolysis bullosa simplex Authorised 20
05767047 Phase 3 Behçet’s disease or juvenile psoriatic arthritis, long-term follow-up Authorised 49
NCT06671483 Phase 3 Psoriatic arthritis Authorised 1088
2023-508251-39-00 Phase 3 Psoriatic arthritis, tapering treatment study Authorised 370
2023-505841-22-00 Phase 3 Moderate to severe plaque psoriasis Completed 600
2023-505842-24-00 Phase 3 Moderate to severe plaque psoriasis Completed 1117
NCT06588738 Phase 3 Moderate to severe plaque psoriasis Completed 890
NCT06586112 Phase 3 Moderate to severe plaque psoriasis Completed 869
NCT04908189 Phase 3 Active psoriatic arthritis Authorised 1110

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Apremilast

  • A study to evaluate the long-term safety of apremilast in children with oral ulcers from Behçet’s disease or juvenile psoriatic arthritis

    Recruiting

    3 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Greece Italy Spain
  • Study of Zasocitinib and Apremilast for Adults with Active Psoriatic Arthritis Who Have Not Used Biologic Medicines

    Recruiting

    3 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Czechia Estonia Germany +6
  • Study of apremilast compared to placebo in children aged 5-17 years with juvenile psoriatic arthritis

    Recruiting

    3 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria Belgium France Germany Greece Italy +6
  • Study on the Effectiveness and Safety of Apremilast for Patients Aged 6 and Older with Generalized Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex

    Recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    France
  • Study on Apremilast for Treating Oral Ulcers in Children with Behçet’s Disease

    Recruiting

    3 1
    Investigated drugs:
    France Greece Italy Spain
  • Study on Reducing Immunosuppressive Drugs in Adults with Psoriatic Arthritis: Methotrexate Disodium, Abatacept, and Certolizumab Pegol

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Germany Italy
  • Study on Apremilast for Patients with Severe Recurrent Mouth Ulcers Resistant to Colchicine

    Not yet recruiting

    3 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    France
  • Study on the Effectiveness and Safety of ESK-001 and Apremilast for Adults with Moderate to Severe Plaque Psoriasis

    Not recruiting

    3 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Bulgaria Czechia Germany Poland Portugal
  • Study of zasocitinib (TAK-279) and apremilast compared to placebo in adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis

    Not recruiting

    3 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Bulgaria Czechia France Germany Greece Hungary +3
  • Study of TAK-279 and apremilast for adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis

    Not recruiting

    3 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Germany Italy Poland

Glossary

  • Clinical trial: A research study in people that tests whether a treatment is safe and works for a specific condition.
  • Phase 2: An earlier study phase that usually looks at whether a treatment may help and checks safety in a smaller group.
  • Phase 3: A later study phase with more people, usually used to compare treatments and confirm benefit and safety.
  • Placebo: A look-alike treatment with no active medicine, used to compare results fairly.
  • Active comparator: A treatment already being used in the study as the comparison group.
  • Enrollment: The number of participants planned or included in a trial.
  • Primary outcome: The main result the study is designed to measure.
  • ACR20: A joint disease score meaning at least 20% improvement in symptoms.
  • ACR Pedi 30: A pediatric joint disease score meaning at least 30% improvement in children.
  • PASI-75: A psoriasis score meaning at least 75% improvement in skin disease.
  • sPGA: Static Physician’s Global Assessment, a doctor’s rating of how clear or severe the skin looks.
  • Minimal disease activity: A low level of active disease, meaning the condition is well controlled.

References