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Spots Global Cancer Trial Database for TreatMent of ActInic KerAtosis Lesions : pharmacoepiDemiological Study of the Impact in Real Life of ingenOl Mebutate Gel (Picato®) on Patients Satisfaction

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Trial Identification

Brief Title: TreatMent of ActInic KerAtosis Lesions : pharmacoepiDemiological Study of the Impact in Real Life of ingenOl Mebutate Gel (Picato®) on Patients Satisfaction

Official Title: TreatMent of ActInic KerAtosis Lesions : pharmacoepiDemiological Study of the Impact in Real Life of ingenOl Mebutate Gel (Picato®) on Patients Satisfaction

Study ID: NCT04202445

Interventions

Ingenol mebutate

Study Description

Brief Summary: This is an observational longitudinal study, prospective, multicenter, performed in metropolitan France, on a representative sample of dermatologists. Data will be collected by physicians during 2 or 3 visits (according to their usual practice), from the patient file, questioning and clinical examination performed during these visits. Data about the patient's perception (satisfaction, perception of local skin reactions, quality of life) will be collected directly by the patient using self-administered questionnaires at inclusion visit, day 7 and 2 months later.

Detailed Description: Actinic keratosis (AKs) are common skin diseases affecting areas previously overexposed to the sun (in particular face, nape of the neck, hands). They affect mainly elderly people (mean age: 74 years old, with 97% who are over 50 years old) and preferably men (60%). In Europe, prevalence of AK in the adult population over 40 years is estimated to be between 6% and 25%. Subjects at risk are light-skinned people (phototype I and II according to Fitzpatrick scale) with high cumulative sun exposure or phototherapy. Over 80% of patients have a light phototype and 37% of patients with AK have an outside professional activity. Diagnosis of AK is usually clinical, during skin examination which is recommended for any physician's visit. There are often multiple lesions, some of which, in the absence of effective treatment, can progress to squamous cell carcinoma (0.025% to 20% per year/lesion). Although the evolution rate of AKs to carcinoma remains low and disappearance or sole persistence of the lesion is possible, their evolution is unpredictable, and it is therefore recommended to monitor and treat the AKs. Treatment options include cryotherapy, topical treatments, photodynamic therapy, vaporization of lesions by CO2 laser or electrocoagulation and curretage. When there are few AK lesions, which are localized and with superficial forms, cryotherapy is the reference treatment (it is widely used by dermatologists, as it is simple, fast and does not require special equipment), whereas topical treatment (5-FU, imiquimod, diclofenac) is recommended in case of multiple keratosis or lesions on a larger area of the skin. The disadvantage of cryotherapy and photodynamic therapy is that these techniques can be painful and lead to depigmentation or scarring. Topical treatments which are available (imiquimod, 5-FU, diclofenac) may induce severe inflammatory reactions sometimes responsible for premature termination and thus ineffective. Combined with their length (4 to 16 weeks), the complexity of current topical regimens would be the cause of poor compliance. So, all dermatologists agree with the need to shorten duration of treatment and reduce the number of applications. Ingenol mebutate gel (Picato®), used in very short 2-3 days cycle, with one application per day, meets this need. Development of ingenol mebutate gel included 4 pivotal phase III trials, evaluating its efficacy and safety. The results of these studies have established satisfactory efficacy and safety for Picato® with, on one hand, proven efficacy after two months for face, scalp, trunk and extremities and, on the other hand, transient local skin reactions (erythema, flaking/scaling, crusting,swelling,...), which appear early, peak in intensity after the end of treatment (day 3 or day 4) and disappear without sequelae within 2-4 weeks after application of the gel. At day 57, mean patient global satisfaction scores, either assessed with TSQM or Skindex-16, were statistically higher in the ingenol mebutate gel group than in the vehicle group. In a long term follow up study, ingenol mebutate produced clinically relevant sustained clearance and long-term lesion reduction. These characteristics are a potentially important advantage for treatment compliance as well as for patient comfort.

Eligibility

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT

Sex: ALL

Healthy Volunteers: No

Locations

Contact Details

Name: Sarah Moumane, MD

Affiliation: LEO Pharma

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Useful links and downloads for this trial

Clinicaltrials.gov

Google Search Results

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