A Short-contact Plaque Test Study With Daivobet® Gel in Psoriasis Vulgaris

February 21, 2025 updated by: LEO Pharma

A Phase IIa Exploratory Study Evaluating the Anti-psoriatic Effect of Daivobet® Gel Applied Then Removed After 10 Minutes, Daivobet® Gel Applied Then Removed After 20 Minutes, Daivobet® Gel Applied for 24 Hours and Daivobet® Gel Vehicle Applied for 24 Hours

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the anti-psoriatic effect of Daivobet® gel applied then removed after 10 minutes (+/- 2 minutes), Daivobet® gel applied then removed after 20 minutes (+/- 2 minutes) compared with Daivobet® gel and Daivobet® gel vehicle applied for 24 hours (+/- 2 hours), using the psoriasis plaque test modified from the method developed by KJ Dumas and JR Scholtz.

Study Overview

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

24

Phase

  • Phase 2

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

      • Nice, France, 06202
        • Centre de Pharmacologie Clinique Appliquée à la Dermatologie (CPCAD)

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

14 years and older (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Following verbal and written information about the trial, the subject has to provide signed and dated informed consent before any study related activities are carried out.
  2. Age 18 years or above.
  3. Either sex.
  4. All skin types.
  5. Subjects with a diagnosis of psoriasis vulgaris with lesions located on arms, legs and/or trunk. The lesions must have a total size suitable for application of 4 different products.
  6. Subjects with, in the opinion of the investigator, stable psoriasis based on Total Plaque Score evaluated at screening visit and at visit 2 (baseline).
  7. Subjects with psoriasis lesions (plaques) assessed by a Total Clinical Score (sum of scores of erythema, scaling and infiltration) of 4 to 9 inclusive, but each individual item ≥ 1.
  8. Subjects willing and able to follow all the study procedures and complete the whole study.
  9. Subjects affiliated to a social security system.
  10. Female subjects of childbearing potential using a reliable method of contraception for at least 1 month before the study start and during the course of the study (e.g., oral contraceptive pill, intrauterine device, contraceptive patches, implantable contraception, condoms) or females of non-childbearing potential (i.e. postmenopausal (absence of menstrual bleeding for 2 years), hysterectomy, bilateral ovariectomy or tubal section/ligation).
  11. Female with a negative urine pregnancy test (at screening visit).

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Females who are pregnant, of child-bearing potential and who wish to become pregnant during the study, or who are breast feeding.
  2. Systemic treatment with biological therapies (marketed or not marketed) with a possible effect on psoriasis vulgaris within 4 weeks (etanercept), 2 months (adalimumab, alefacept, infliximab), 4 months (ustekinumab) or 4 weeks/5 half-lives (which-ever is longer) for experimental biological products prior to randomisation and during the study.
  3. Systemic treatments with all other therapies than biologicals, with a potential effect on psoriasis vulgaris (e.g., corticosteroids, retinoids, immunosuppressants) within the 4- week period prior to randomisation and during the study.
  4. Use of phototherapy within the following time periods prior to randomisation and during the study:

    • PUVA or Grenz ray therapy (4 weeks),
    • UVB (2 weeks).
  5. Subjects using one of the following topical drugs within 4 weeks prior to randomisation and during the study:

    - Potent or very potent (WHO group III-IV) corticosteroids.

  6. Subjects using one of the following topical drugs for the treatment of psoriasis within 2 weeks prior to randomisation and during the study:

    • WHO group I-II corticosteroids (except if used for treatment of scalp and/or facial psoriasis),
    • Topical retinoids,
    • Vitamin D analogues,
    • Topical immunomodulators (e.g. calcineurin inhibitors),
    • Anthracen derivatives,
    • Tar,
    • Salicylic acid.
  7. Subjects using emollients on the target plaques within one week before randomisation and during the study.
  8. Initiation of, or expected changes in concomitant medication that may affect psoriasis vulgaris (e.g., beta blockers, anti-malaria drugs, lithium and ACE inhibitors) within 2 weeks prior to randomisation and during the study.
  9. Subjects with current diagnosis of guttate, erythrodermic, exfoliative or pustular psoriasis.
  10. Subjects with known/suspected disorders of calcium metabolism associated with hypercalcemia within the last 10 years, based on medical history.
  11. Subjects with any of the following conditions present on the test area: viral (e.g. herpes or varicella) lesions of the skin, fungal and bacterial skin infections, parasitic infections and atrophic skin.
  12. Subjects with skin manifestations in relation to syphilis or tuberculosis, rosacea, perioral dermatitis, acne vulgaris, atrophic skin, striae atrophicae, fragility of skin veins, icthyosis, acne rosacea, ulcers and wounds within the plaque test areas.
  13. History of any severe disease or serious current condition (based on subject interview and/or results of screening physical examination) which, in the opinion of the investigator, would put the subject at risk by participating in the study or would interfere significantly with the evaluation of study results or the study course (e.g. cancer, severe cardiopathy, severe renal insufficiency, severe hepatic insufficiency).
  14. Subjects who have received treatment with any non-marketed drug substance (i.e., an agent which has not yet been made available for clinical use following registration) within the 4 week period prior to randomisation or longer, if the class of the substance requires a longer washout as defined above (e.g., biological treatments).
  15. Subjects with current participation in any other interventional clinical trial, based on interview of the subject.
  16. Subjects with known or suspected hypersensitivity to component(s) of the investigational products.
  17. Subjects with any concomitant medical or dermatological disorder(s) which might preclude accurate evaluation of the psoriasis.
  18. Subjects foreseeing an intensive solar exposure during the study (UV radiation, etc.) or having been exposed within two weeks preceding the screening visit.
  19. Subjects impossible to contact in case of emergency.
  20. Subjects who are known or, in the opinion of the investigator, are unlikely to comply with the Clinical Study Protocol (e.g. alcoholism, drug dependency or psychotic state).
  21. Subjects who are in an exclusion period in the National Biomedical Research Register of the French Ministry of Health at randomisation.
  22. Subjects under guardianship, hospitalized in a public or private institution, for a reason other than the research or subject deprived of freedom.
  23. Subjects previously randomised in this trial.

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Other
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Single Group Assignment
  • Masking: Single

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: Daivobet® gel
Once daily application, 3 weeks
Once daily application, 3 weeks
Once daily application, 3 weeks
Once daily application, 3 weeks

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Change in Total Clinical Score From Baseline to Day 22
Time Frame: baseline to day 22
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of a psoriatic lesion. Maximum score is 9 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (least severe). The single items erythema, scaling, and infiltration (maximum score 3 each) are summed to obtain the Total Clincal Score
baseline to day 22

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Change in Total Clinical Score at Day 4 Compared to Baseline
Time Frame: Baseline to day 4
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of a psoriatic lesion. Maximum score is 9 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (least severe). The single items erythema, scaling, and infiltration (maximum score 3 each) are summed to obtain the Total Clinical Score.
Baseline to day 4
Change in Total Clinical Score at Day 8 Compared to Baseline
Time Frame: Baseline to day 8
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of a psoriatic lesion. Maximum score is 9 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (least severe). The single items erythema, scaling, and infiltration (maximum score 3 each) are summed to obtain the Total Clinical Score.
Baseline to day 8
Change in Total Clinical Score at Day 11 Compared to Baseline
Time Frame: Baseline to day 11
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of a psoriatic lesion. Maximum score is 9 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (least severe). The single items erythema, scaling, and infiltration (maximum score 3 each) are summed to obtain the Total Clinical Score.
Baseline to day 11
Change in Total Clinical Score at Day 15 Compared to Baseline
Time Frame: Baseline to day 15
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of a psoriatic lesion. Maximum score is 9 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (least severe). The single items erythema, scaling, and infiltration (maximum score 3 each) are summed to obtain the Total Clinial Score.
Baseline to day 15
Change in Total Clinical Score at Day 18 Compared to Baseline
Time Frame: Baseline to day 18
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of a psoriatic lesion. Maximum score is 9 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (least severe). The single items erythema, scaling, and infiltration (maximum score 3 each) are summed to obtain the Total Clinical Score.
Baseline to day 18
Change From Baseline in Erythema at Day 4.
Time Frame: Baseline to day 4
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of erythema. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 4
Change From Baseline in Erythema at Day 8.
Time Frame: Baseline to day 8
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of erythema. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 8
Change From Baseline in Erythema at Day 11
Time Frame: Baseline to day 11
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of erythema. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 11
Change From Baseline in Erythema at Day 15
Time Frame: Baseline to day 15
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of erythema. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 15
Change From Baseline in Erythema at Day 18
Time Frame: Baseline to day 18
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of erythema. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 18
Change From Baseline in Erythema at Day 22
Time Frame: Baseline to day 22
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of erythema. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 22
Change From Baseline in Infiltration at Day 4
Time Frame: Baseline to day 4
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of infiltration. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 4
Change From Baseline in Infiltration at Day 8
Time Frame: Baseline to day 8
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of infiltration. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 8
Change From Baseline in Infiltration at Day 11
Time Frame: Baseline to day 11
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of infiltration. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 11
Change From Baseline in Infiltration at Day 15
Time Frame: Baseline to day 15
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of infiltration. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 15
Change From Baseline in Infiltration at Day 18
Time Frame: Baseline to day 18
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of infiltration. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 18
Change From Baseline in Infiltration at Day 22
Time Frame: Baseline to day 22
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of infiltration. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 22
Change From Baseline in Scaling at Day 4
Time Frame: Baseline to day 4
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of scaling. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 4
Change From Baseline in Scaling at Day 8
Time Frame: Baseline to day 8
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of scaling. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 8
Change From Baseline in Scaling at Day 11
Time Frame: Baseline to day 11
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of scaling. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 11
Change From Baseline in Scaling at Day 15
Time Frame: Baseline to day 15
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of scaling. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 15
Change From Baseline in Scaling at Day 18
Time Frame: Baseline to day 18
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of scaling. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 18
Change From Baseline in Scaling at Day 22
Time Frame: Baseline to day 22
Investigator's rating of the clinical appearance of scaling. Maximum score is 3 (most severe); minimum score is 0 (absent).
Baseline to day 22
Change in Lesion Thickness Measured by Ultrasound From Baseline to Day 22.
Time Frame: Baseline to day 22
Baseline to day 22
Change in Skin Thickness - Echo-poor Band - Measured by Ultrasound From Baseline to Day 22
Time Frame: Baseline to day 22
Baseline to day 22

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Sponsor

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Catherine Queille-Roussel, MD, Centre de Pharmacologie Clinique Appliquée à la Dermatologie (CPCAD), Hôpital l'Archet 2, 151 route Saint-Antoine de Ginestière 06202 Nice Cedex 3, France

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start

June 1, 2012

Primary Completion (Actual)

October 1, 2012

Study Completion (Actual)

October 1, 2012

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

May 23, 2012

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

May 25, 2012

First Posted (Estimated)

May 30, 2012

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

March 25, 2025

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 21, 2025

Last Verified

March 1, 2015

More Information

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

Clinical Trials on Psoriasis Vulgaris

Clinical Trials on Daivobet® gel applied then removed after 10 minutes (+/- 2 minutes)

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