Callender Valerie D, Alexis Andrew F, Bhatia Neal, Harper Julie C, Baldwin Hilary, Guenin Eric, Kircik Leon H
Dr. Callender is with Callender Dermatology and Cosmetic Center in Glenn Dale, Maryland, and the Howard University College of Medicine in Washington, District of Columbia.
Dr. Alexis is with Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, New York. Dr.
J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2025 Apr;18(4):10-16.
Clindamycin phosphate 1.2%/adapalene 0.15%/benzoyl peroxide 3.1% (CAB) gel-the only approved fixed-dose, triple-combination acne treatment-demonstrated superior efficacy to vehicle and component dyads, with favorable safety/tolerability in Phase 2 and Phase 3 studies. In order to examine efficacy and safety of CAB in patients with darker skin phototypes, a post hoc analysis of clinical trial data of participants who self-identified as "Black or African American" was conducted.
Data were pooled from two Phase 2 and two Phase 3, double-blind, 12-week studies (NCT03170388, NCT04892706, NCT04214639, NCT04214652). Eligible participants aged ≥9 years (≥12 years in NCT04892706) were randomized to once-daily CAB or vehicle. Endpoints included ≥2-grade reduction from baseline in Evaluator's Global Severity Score and clear/almost clear skin (treatment success) and inflammatory/noninflammatory lesion counts. Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) and cutaneous safety/tolerability were also assessed.
Of 1,115 participants randomized to CAB or vehicle, 156 (14%) were Black. At Week 12, 32.0 percent of CAB-treated participants achieved treatment success versus 18.3 percent with vehicle (=0.07). Inflammatory and noninflammatory lesion reductions were significantly greater with CAB versus vehicle (68.8% vs. 51.4% and 57.8% vs. 45.5%, respectively; <0.05, both). TEAE severity was mild to moderate, and hyperpigmentation mean scores remained at/below baseline value (0.7; 1=mild).
Studies were not powered to detect significant differences between CAB and vehicle for Black participants; therefore, values are for informative purposes only.
CAB gel was efficacious and well tolerated in Black participants with acne.
1.2%磷酸克林霉素/0.15%阿达帕林/3.1%过氧化苯甲酰(CAB)凝胶——唯一获批的固定剂量三联复方痤疮治疗药物——在2期和3期研究中显示出优于赋形剂和单一成分组合的疗效,且安全性/耐受性良好。为了研究CAB在肤色较深的患者中的疗效和安全性,对自我认定为“黑人或非裔美国人”的参与者的临床试验数据进行了事后分析。
数据来自两项2期和两项3期双盲、为期12周的研究(NCT03170388、NCT04892706、NCT04214639、NCT04214652)。年龄≥9岁(在NCT04892706中≥12岁)的符合条件的参与者被随机分为每日一次的CAB组或赋形剂组。终点包括评估者整体严重程度评分较基线降低≥2级以及皮肤清洁/几乎清洁(治疗成功)和炎性/非炎性皮损计数。还评估了治疗中出现的不良事件(TEAE)以及皮肤安全性/耐受性。
在1115名被随机分为CAB组或赋形剂组的参与者中,156名(14%)为黑人。在第12周时,接受CAB治疗的参与者中有32.0%取得了治疗成功,而接受赋形剂治疗的参与者中这一比例为18.3%(=0.07)。与赋形剂相比,CAB使炎性和非炎性皮损的减少更为显著(分别为68.8%对51.4%和57.8%对45.5%;均<0.05)。TEAE的严重程度为轻度至中度,色素沉着平均评分保持在基线值及以下(0.7;1=轻度)。
研究的样本量不足以检测出黑人参与者中CAB与赋形剂之间的显著差异;因此,值仅用于提供信息。
CAB凝胶对患有痤疮的黑人参与者有效且耐受性良好。