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Efinaconazole topical solution effective against early onychomycosis


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF DRUGS IN DERMATOLOGY

References

Patients with early onychomycosis can be effectively treated with once-daily efinaconazole topical solution, 10%, according to data from more than 1,000 patients.

“Early treatment before the disease progresses to total dystrophic onychomycosis can increase cure rate and may avoid the need for systemic treatments,” wrote study author Dr. Phoebe Rich, a dermatologist in group practice in Portland, Ore.

The study used two identical multicenter, randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled trials. Of 1,655 subjects, 1,526 underwent randomization, and subjects were categorized based on disease duration at baseline. A total of 74 subjects had onychomycosis for less than 1 year, 682 for 1-5 years, and 770 for more than 5 years. The primary endpoint was complete cure rate – defined as 0% clinical involvement of target toenail, and both negative results on a potassium hydroxide examination and a fungal culture – after 52 weeks (J. Drugs Dermatol. 2015;14:58-62).

After 52 weeks, 42.6% of patients with a baseline disease duration of less than 1 year had a complete cure with efinaconazole, compared with 16.7% on a vehicle (control). In the 1- to 5-year group, 17.1% of patients with a baseline disease duration had a complete cure with efinaconazole, compared with 4.4% on vehicle (P < .001); in the group of subjects with a disease duration longer than 5 years, 16.2% of patients had a complete cure on efinaconazole, compared with 2.5% on vehicle (P < .001).

Additionally, 28.3% of patients with no other toenails affected at baseline had a complete cure with efinaconazole, compared with 23.7% on vehicle; 18.6% of patients with one to two nontarget toenails affected at baseline had a complete cure with efinaconazole, compared with 4.9% on vehicle (P < .001); and 16.5% of patients with more than two nontarget toenails affected at baseline had a complete cure on efinaconazole, compared with 0.1% on vehicle (P < .001).

“The availability of an effective topical treatment for onychomycosis could encourage earlier treatment and prevent the progression of the disease, where it would become more difficult to treat successfully,” said Dr. Rich, who also cautioned that the study’s 52-week length “may be too brief to evaluate a clinical cure in onychomycosis.”

Dr. Rich has served as a paid consultant to Valeant Pharmaceuticals and was a principal investigator in the pivotal trials with efinaconazole topical solution, 10%.

dchitnis@frontlinemedcom.com

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