Litcius/Paper detail

A glycopyrronium bromide 1% cream for topical treatment of primary axillary hyperhidrosis: efficacy and safety results from a phase IIIa randomized controlled trial*

Christoph Abels, Michael Soeberdt, Ana Kilić, Hubert Reich, U. Knie, C. Jourdan, Katja Schramm, Susanne Heimstaedt‐Muskett, Clarissa Masur, Rolf‐Markus Szeimies

2021British Journal of Dermatology39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Effective topical treatment options for patients with primary axillary hyperhidrosis (PAHH) are limited. A phase I trial showed promising results regarding the efficacy and safety of a topical cream containing glycopyrronium bromide (GPB). OBJECTIVES: To assess the efficacy, safety and tolerability of a 4-week topical treatment of GPB 1% cream in patients with PAHH vs. placebo. METHODS: ). RESULTS: Absolute change in sweat production from baseline to day 29 in logarithmic values was significantly larger in the GPB 1% group compared with the placebo group (P = 0·004). The improvement in HidroQoL exceeded the minimal clinically important difference of 4. The proportion of responders was twofold higher for sweat reduction (-197·08 mg GPB 1% vs. -83·49 mg placebo), HDSS (23% GPB 1% vs. 12% placebo) and HidroQoL (60% GPB 1% vs. 26% placebo). Treatment was safe: most treatment-emergent adverse effects were mild or moderate, and transient. Local tolerability was very good, with 9% of patients having only mild or moderate application-site reactions. The most reported adverse drug reaction was dry mouth (16%), an expected anticholinergic effect of the treatment. CONCLUSIONS: GPB 1% cream may provide an effective new treatment option exhibiting a good safety profile for patients with PAHH. The long-term open-label part (phase IIIb) is ongoing.

Topics & Concepts

TolerabilityMedicinePlaceboAdverse effectAnticholinergicHyperhidrosisRandomized controlled trialInternal medicineAnesthesiaAlternative medicinePathologySympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis TreatmentsUrticaria and Related ConditionsKidney Stones and Urolithiasis Treatments