Title: FDA Perspective
1-
- FDA Perspective
- Topical Immunosuppressants
-
- Bindi Nikhar, MD.
- Division of Dermatologic and Dental Drugs
2Introduction
- Topical immunosuppressants are the newest class
of drugs to be approved for atopic dermatitis
(AD) - They belong to a class of drugs known as
macrolactam immunosuppressants, which were first
introduced in the 1980s for prevention of graft
rejection in transplant therapy - Tacrolimus (FK506) (trade name Protopic)
- Pimecrolimus (SDZ ASM 981) (trade name Elidel)
3Topical Corticosteroids (TCS)
- Antiinflammatory effects
- - TCS inhibit nuclear factor kappa
B (NFkB), which upregulates cytokines. Inhibition
done by increasing production of NFkB inhibitor
(IkB) and directly binding inactivating NFkB - - Affects leukocytes, lymphocytes, monocytes,
epidermal Langerhans cells - - Inhibit phospholipase A2 inhibit
prostaglandins leukotrienes - - Vasoconstrictive
- - Antipruritic - Mast cell sensitization IgE
induced mediator release inhibited - Antiproliferative Atrophogenic effects
4Tacrolimus
- Advisory Committee meeting on 11/16/2000
- Second-line therapy in the treatment of atopic
dermatitis (AD) - Not be approved in children lt 2 years of age
- Only the lower concentration be approved for 2 to
15 years - - 12 week study in pediatric patients
- equivalent efficacy for both strengths
- - larger BSA more absorption
- - longer exposure long-term safety unknown
5Tacrolimus
- Protopic (topical tacrolimus) approved on
12/8/2000. 0.03 ointment approved for children 2
to 15 years, 0.1 ointment approved for adults - Prograf (systemic tacrolimus) approved on
4/8/1994, first introduced for allograft
rejection, currently used mainly in kidney and
liver transplants
6Pimecrolimus
- Elidel (pimecrolimus) cream 1 approved on
12/13/2001 for patients 2 years of age and older - Phase 3 studies higher incidence of adverse
effects () in Elidel arm vs. vehicle arm URI
(24/14 ), pyrexia (32/13), otitis media (4/0),
gastroenteritis (7/3), diarrhea (8/0) - Currently available only for topical use
- Literature report - oral formulation under
development for psoriasis and atopic dermatitis - Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy. 2004
March5(3)643-55, Wolf K, Stuetz A. Pimecrolimus
for the treatment of inflammatory skin diseases.
7Clinical studies for Pimecrolimus
- 2-17 years - 1 year safety study,
nasopharyngitis (26/21), influenza (13/4),
pharyngitis (8/3), viral infection (7/1), pyrexia
(13/5), cough (16/11), headache (25/16) - 3-23 months 6 week study, pyrexia (32/13), URI
(24/14), nasopharyngitis (15/8), gastroenteritis
(7/3), otitis media (4/0), diarrhea (8/0) - 3-23 months 1 year study, pyrexia (30/20), URI
(21/17), cough (15/9), vomiting (9/4), rhinitis
(13/9), viral rash (4/0), rhinorrhea (4/0),
wheezing (4/0) - all adverse events, Elidel vs. vehicle ()
8Indications for Use
- Tacrolimus moderate to severe AD
- Pimecrolimus mild to moderate AD
- Both indicated for patients in whom the use of
alternative, conventional therapies are deemed
inadvisable because of potential risks, or in the
treatment of patients who are not adequately
responsive to, or are intolerant of alternative,
conventional therapies - Neither drug approved for children lt 2 years of
age
9Recent Concerns
- UNCERTAIN RISK FOR CANCER
- Biological plausibility
- Emerging signal in AERS
- Difficult to study and answers would be late
- INFORMATIONAL LANDSCAPE
- Suggests first-line
- Steroid-free, Direct-to-consumer advertising
- Other indications
- Peer and non-peer reviewed literature portrays
safety - CURRENT PRACTICES
- Overall use increasing
- Use in lt 2 years increasing
10Proposed mechanisms of action
- Clinical significance of these observations
in atopic dermatitis are unknown. - T P bind to FK-binding protein
(FKBP) - T/P-FKBP complex inhibits calcineurin
- inhibits T cell activation
- Both inhibit production of
pro-inflammatory cytokines from mast cells and
down regulate the production of Th1 and Th2 type
cytokines
11Pharmacokinetics
- Systemic absorption can take place in both adult
and pediatric age groups from the topical
application of both drugs - Factors leading to increased absorption include
- Larger body surface areas
- Younger age groups, especially the 3 to 23 month
age groups due to the larger body surface area to
mass ratio - Reduced skin barrier function -Nethertons
syndrome, generalized erythrodermic skin
conditions, eg. GVHD
12AERS reports of systemic exposure
- Acute renal failure reported in a patient with
Nethertons syndrome secondary to topical
absorption of tacrolimus. 0.1 ointment used - for 1 year. On admission, tacrolimus level
34.4 ng/ml, BUN/creatinine 54/3.4. On
discharge, tacrolimus level 2.3 ng/ml,
creatinine 1.9 - Tacrolimus 0.1 ointment was used in a 11 month
old patient to treat GVHD secondary to BMT.
Patient died tacrolimus levels were 75 ng/ml at
time of death
13Cases of systemic exposure
- Literature report - 7 month patient with BMT
secondary to SCID. At age 7 months, single
application of tacrolimus 0.1 on scalp for
chronic dermatitis tacrolimus level
24 ng/ml at 20 hours after application. After 7
days, 0.03 ointment used level 7
ng/ml at 20 hours after application with
transient tremor of the upper limbs and jaw. - Increased tacrolimus levels have been reported
in 3 patients with ichthyosis and Nethertons
syndrome (3-14 years) after treatment with
topical tacrolimus. - Journal of Pediatrics, August 2003, vol 143,
number 2 - Arch Dermatology 2001, 137 747-750
-
14Cases of systemic exposure
- Literature report - 28 month old patient with
lamellar ichthyosis, 0.1 tacrolimus ointment
used over 100 of BSA. 7 weeks later
tacrolimus level 19.3 ng/ml 3 hours after
application. 2 weeks later, after decreased
amount of use level 7.4 ng/ml. 2 weeks
later, after decreased frequency (twice daily
every third day) tacrolimus level 5.8
ng/ml. - Archives Dermatology, vol 138, Sep. 2002.
15Adverse Effects
- Local (application site)
- Burning, pruritus, erythema, irritation, edema,
urticaria - Systemic
- Respiratory gastrointestinal infections, viral
skin rashes (herpes simplex and zoster, eczema
herpeticum), lymphadenopathy, streptococcal
staphylococcal infections, leg amputation due to
infection (P - no further information),
septicemia (T), septic arthritis (P), renal
failure (T)
16Systemic immunosuppression and malignancies
- Patients receiving Prograf (systemic tacrolimus)
are at an increased risk of developing Hodgkins,
Non-Hodgkins lymphomas, Kaposis sarcomas, and
in particular skin cancers such as squamous cell
carcinomas (SCC), basal cell carcinomas (BCC) and
malignant melanomas - Literature reports suggest a correlation between
tumor regression and reduction in
immunosuppression
17Systemic immunosuppression and malignancies
- Comparative incidence of de novo
non-lymphoid malignancies after liver
transplantation under tacrolimus protocols done
using SEER data - 1000 liver transplant patients, median follow-up
6.5 years, 57 malignancies - 22/57 (33.3) were skin malignancies 50 SCC,
40.9 BCC, 9.1 melanomas - SEER incidence rates not available for SCC BCC
- Malignant melanoma - 1.94 times SEER rates
- Oropharyngeal cancers - 7.6 times SEER rates
- Transplantation 1998661193-200, Jain AB, Yee
LD, Nalesnik et al.
18Systemic immunosuppression skin cancers
- Squamous basal cell carcinomas account for gt
90 of all skin cancers in transplant recipients
melanomas 6.2 in adults (15 in children) - Cancers more aggressive, incidence increases with
duration of immunosuppressive therapy tapering
therapy usually decreases rate - Cancers affect 50 or more of white transplant
patients (genetic difference present) - Australian study incidence 7 after I year of
therapy, increased to 82 after 20 years - Dutch study incidence 0.2 after 1 year and
long-term incidence 41. - N Engl J Med 2003 3481681-91. Skin cancers
after organ transplantation.
19Systemic immunosuppression and lymphoma
- Post transplant lymphoproliferative disorder
(PTLD) in immunosuppressed patients related to
Epstein-Barr virus infection is a well-recognized
complication - Risk of PTLD appears greatest in young children
who are at risk for EBV infection while
immunosuppressed - Risk appears to be related to the intensity and
duration of immunosuppression - Prograf label
20Possible mechanisms of topical immunosuppressants
in causing malignancy-related events
- Topical immunosuppressants may break local
immune surveillance resulting in skin cancers - T P draining from atopic skin into regional
lymph nodes may result in immunosuppression - Systemic exposure to these drugs over a course
of time could lead to the formation of lymphomas
and skin cancers
21Case report of lentigines in area of topical
tacrolimus use
- 3 children with severe atopic dermatitis
were noted at routine follow-up to have developed
multiple small pigmented macules during long-term
therapy with topical tacrolimus 0.1. - 4 year old patient with severe AD, tacrolimus
0.1 ointment used 6 months after start of
therapy, multiple lentigines noted over sites of
continued tacrolimus use. - 7 year old patient with severe AD, tacrolimus
0.1 ointment used 5 months after start of
therapy, multiple lentigines noted especially
over area of therapy. - British journal of Dermatology 2005 152,
152-154
22Case report of lentigines in area of topical
tacrolimus use
- 11 year old patient with severe AD, tacrolimus
0.1 ointment used after about 3 and a half
years of onset of therapy, multiple lentigines
noted, especially over area of therapy. - Histology confirmation present in 2 cases,
treatment discontinued, lesions persisted. - Lentigines also occurred at sun-protected sites.
- Per report, focal distribution of lentigines to
sites of tacrolimus use and the temporal
association between use of tacrolimus and
development of lesions suggest direct etiology.
23Case report (contd)
- Simple lentigines are small pigmented macules
that usually appear in childhood on sun-exposed
sites. - They represent the simplest form of melanocytic
neoplasia and are one end of a spectrum of
melanocytic maturation that ranges from
lentigines to junctional, compound and dermal
naevi. - Post-inflammatory changes documented in AD, but,
discrete pigmented macules are not documnted. - Systemic immunosuppressants reported to cause an
increase in melanocytic activity. - Does topical tacrolimus have an effect
(undefined) on melanocyte biology ?
24Concerns in the pediatric age groups
- Long-term effects of topical immunosuppressants
and their effects on the developing immune system
in infants and children are unknown - Medications used on an intermittent, long-term
basis - About one third of children with moderate to
severe AD may continue to use these drugs into
teenage and adult years
25Expanding use
- Literature reports suggest use in following
conditions - Contact dermatitis, chronic hand dermatitis,
seborrheic dermatitis, rosacea, psoriasis, lichen
planus, lichen sclerosus et atrophicus, Graft vs.
Host disease, pyoderma gangrenosum, etc - Pimecrolimus Patients 3-18 months, atopic
march study investigating benefits of
long-term management of AD, starting in infants
at first sign of disease - Novartis web site
26Use characteristics
- Use of both drugs is increasing in the US
- Use is increasing in the pediatric age groups
- Substantial proportion of use is in children lt 2
years of age - How often are they being used first-line?
27Concerns about long-term use
- Both drugs are being widely reported as safe and
effective with some local side effects, but being
steroid-free - In medical and non-medical journals, need for
long-term safety information and larger patient
numbers is often ignored
28October 2003 Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting
- 5 malignancy related events associated with
tacrolimus and 2 non-malignant tumors with
pimecrolimus - (Newer malignancy related events have since
been reported) - Logistics of cancer registry was to be discussed
- Difficult to initiate, answers not available for
10 to 12 years, inconclusive - Label revisions, addition of a black box and
other risk management issues were discussed
29Recent History
- AERS malignancy related
reports for tacrolimus and pimecrolimus since
approval - 21 with tacrolimus
- 9 with pimecrolimus
-
- Confounding factors not unusual for AERS
events -
-
30Recent Concerns
- UNCERTAIN RISK FOR CANCER
- Biological plausibility
- Emerging signal in AERS
- Difficult to study and answers would be late
- INFORMATIONAL LANDSCAPE
- Suggests first-line
- Steroid-free, Direct-to-consumer advertising
- Other indications
- Peer and non-peer reviewed literature portrays
safety - CURRENT PRACTICES
- Overall use increasing
- Use in lt 2 years increasing