Publication date: Available online 10 July 2018
Source: Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
Author(s): Dee Anna Glaser, Adelaide A. Hebert, Alexander Nast, William P. Werschler, Lawrence Green, Richard Mamelok, Janice Drew, John Quiring, David M. Pariser
Abstract
Background
Glycopyrronium tosylate (GT) is a topical anticholinergic developed for once-daily treatment of primary axillary hyperhidrosis.
Objective
Assess the efficacy and safety of GT for primary axillary hyperhidrosis.
Methods
ATMOS-1 and ATMOS-2 were replicate randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled, 4-week phase 3 trials. Patients were randomized 2:1 to GT 3.75% or vehicle applied once daily to each axilla for 4 weeks. Coprimary endpoints were responder rate (≥4-point improvement from Baseline) on Item 2 (sweating severity) of the Axillary Sweating Daily Diary (ASDD), a newly developed patient-reported outcome, and absolute change from Baseline in axillary gravimetric sweat production at Week 4. Safety evaluation included treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs).
Results
Pooled data, consistent with individual trial results show significantly more GT-treated patients achieved ASDD Item 2 response versus vehicle (59.5% vs 27.6%) and had reduced sweat production from Baseline (-107.6mg/5min vs -92.1mg/5min) at Week 4 (P<0.001 for both coprimary endpoints). Most TEAEs were mild or moderate and infrequently led to discontinuation.
Limitations
Short trial duration and inherent challenges in gravimetrically assessing sweat production.
Conclusions
Daily, topically-applied GT over 4 weeks reduced sweating severity as measured by ASDD-Item 2, reduced sweat production as measured gravimetrically, and was generally well tolerated in primary axillary hyperhidrosis patients.
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