Efficacy and Safety of Abrocitinib in Prurigo Nodularis and Chronic Pruritus of Unknown Origin

JAMA Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

A single-center, phase 2, open-label, nonrandomized trial evaluated abrocitinib 200 mg orally once daily for 12 weeks in adults with moderate to severe prurigo nodularis (n=10) or chronic pruritus of unknown origin (n=10), with 4-week follow-up.

Key findings

By week 12, weekly Peak Pruritus NRS decreased by 78.3% in PN (95% CI, -118.5 to -38.1; P<.001) and 53.7% in CPUO (95% CI, -98.8 to -8.6; P=.01); 8/10 PN and 6/10 CPUO achieved ≥4-point PP‑NRS reduction, and DLQI decreased by 53.2% and 49.0%, respectively. Acneiform eruption occurred in 2/20 (10%); no serious adverse events were reported.

Study limitations

Small, single-center, open-label, nonrandomized design (n=20) limits internal validity and generalizability. Imbalanced sex distribution (PN all female; CPUO mostly male) and incomplete follow-up for 2 participants may bias results.

Clinical implications

Abrocitinib monotherapy produced large 12-week itch reductions and quality-of-life gains in PN and CPUO with few adverse events in this small study; confirmation in randomized, placebo-controlled trials is needed before changing practice.