Rilzabrutinib in Antihistamine-Refractory Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria

JAMA Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

A 52-week phase 2 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging trial tested oral rilzabrutinib (400 mg qPM, 800 mg/d, or 1200 mg/d) vs placebo for 12 weeks in adults (18-80 years) with moderate to severe antihistamine-refractory chronic spontaneous urticaria across 12 countries; the primary analysis used omalizumab-naive patients (n=143). The primary end point was change from baseline at week 12 in ISS7 (US/reference) or UAS7 (non-US).

Key findings

At week 12, rilzabrutinib 1200 mg/d improved ISS7 vs placebo (LS mean change -9.21 vs -5.77; difference -3.44; 95% CI -6.25 to -0.62; P=.02) and UAS7 vs placebo (LS mean change -16.89 vs -10.14; difference -6.75; 95% CI -12.23 to -1.26; P=.02) in omalizumab-naive patients. Improvements in HSS7 and AAS7 occurred as early as week 1; diarrhea, nausea, and headache were more frequent with rilzabrutinib than placebo.

Study limitations

Primary analysis excluded omalizumab-incomplete responders and focused on omalizumab-naive patients (n=143). The blinded period was only 12 weeks with a 40-week open-label extension, limiting long-term efficacy and safety inferences.

Clinical implications

For H1-antihistamine–refractory CSU, rilzabrutinib 1200 mg/d reduced itch and hive activity over 12 weeks vs placebo with early onset and mainly gastrointestinal and headache adverse events. Use is supported by these phase 2 results, but longer-term benefits and harms remain uncertain.