Table of Contents
- Clinical trials overview
- Hidradenitis suppurativa study
- Atopic dermatitis study
- What the trials measured
- Who could take part
- Key points for patients
Clinical trials overview
Two Phase 2 clinical trials studied Sar444656 in adults with moderate to severe skin disease.[1][2] Both were interventional studies, which means the researchers gave a study treatment and then measured outcomes over time.[1][2]
Both trials were completed and compared Sar444656 with a matched placebo, meaning a look-alike treatment without the active study drug.[1][2]
Hidradenitis suppurativa study
NCT06028230 studied adult participants with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa.[1] The study title says it evaluated the efficacy and safety of Sar444656 compared with placebo.[1]
This trial enrolled 370 participants and was completed.[1] The brief summary says the main goal was to see whether Sar444656 reduced abscess and inflammatory nodule count by Week 16.[1]
Atopic dermatitis study
NCT06058156 studied adult participants with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis.[2] The trial compared Sar444656 with placebo and was also completed.[2]
This study enrolled 322 participants.[2] Its brief summary says the goal was to assess the effect of Sar444656 on AD lesions, which are the skin areas affected by the disease.[2]
What the trials measured
The main result for the hidradenitis suppurativa study was the percent change from baseline in total abscess and inflammatory nodule count.[1] Baseline means the starting point before treatment began.[1]
The main result for the atopic dermatitis study was the percent change from baseline in EASI.[2] EASI is a score used to measure how severe atopic dermatitis is.[2]
Who could take part
Both studies were limited to adult participants with moderate to severe disease.[1][2] The trial data do not describe healthy volunteers or children as target groups.[1][2]
The studies focused on people whose skin disease was serious enough to be described as moderate to severe.[1][2] This means the researchers were looking at patient groups with a meaningful disease burden.[1][2]
Key points for patients
Sar444656 has been studied in two completed Phase 2 trials.[1][2]
One trial focused on hidradenitis suppurativa, and the other focused on atopic dermatitis.[1][2]
The main goal in both studies was to measure whether the treatment improved disease signs over time.[1][2]
The main study groups were adults with moderate to severe disease.[1][2]



