Silverberg, J.I., Simpson, E.L., Guttman-Yassky, E., Cork, M.J., de Bruin-Weller, M., Yosipovitch, G., Eckert, L., Chen, Z., Ardeleanu, M., Shumel, B., Hultsch, T., Rossi, A.B., Hamilton, J.D., Orengo, J.M., Ruddy, M., Graham, N.M.H., Pirozzi, G., and Gadkari, A.
Background \ud Pain is a frequent symptom of atopic dermatitis (AD).\ud \ud Objectives \ud The aims of the study were to evaluate the effects of dupilumab on pain/discomfort in AD and to determine whether pain correlates with other outcomes.\ud \ud Methods \ud This was a post hoc analysis of 5 randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials in which adults with chronic AD received placebo or dupilumab 300 mg every 2 weeks or once weekly with and without topical corticosteroids. Proportions of patients with no pain/discomfort on this dimension of the 5-dimension EuroQoL (EQ-5D) at week 16 (all trials) and week 52 (CHRONOS) were compared between placebo and dupilumab. Correlations were evaluated between pain/discomfort and signs and symptoms of AD.\ud \ud Results \ud Among 2632 evaluated patients, 72.9% to 83.1% reported at least moderate pain/discomfort at baseline. Higher proportions treated with dupilumab reported no pain/discomfort at week 16 relative to placebo; risk differences ranged from 22.3% (95% confidence interval = 11.5%–33.1%) to 42.2% (95% confidence interval = 26.6%–57.8%, all P ≤ 0.0001), with similar effects observed at week 52. Correlations at baseline of pain/discomfort with signs and symptoms of AD were low to moderate.\ud \ud Conclusions \ud Pain/discomfort, present in a substantial proportion of patients with moderate-to-severe AD, was significantly reduced by dupilumab treatment. Given the low-to-moderate correlations with other AD symptoms at baseline, pain likely represents a distinct AD symptom.\ud \ud Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers NCT01859988, NCT02277743, NCT02277769, NCT02260986, and NCT02755649.