Patients with recessive X-linked and autosomal recessive lamellar congenital ichthyosis (CI) achieved treatment success with a novel topical isotretinoin ointment known as TMB-001, results from a phase 2b study demonstrated.
"Patients with these deficiencies have generally had very limited treatment options, including lifelong use of emollients and keratolytics, and in severe cases, systemic retinoids," Christopher G. Bunick, MD, PhD, associate professor of dermatology at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., said at a late-breaking abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. "There is currently no [Food and Drug Administration]-approved drug for CI. So, imagine your patients and their parents, and the frustration they must feel."
In a study known as CONTROL, he and his colleagues evaluated the effect of TMB-001 on two subtypes of congenital ichthyosis: X-linked recessive ichthyosis (XLRI) and autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis–lamellar ichthyosis (ARCI-LI). Of the two, the most common is XLRI, which has an estimated incidence of 1:3,000 and is caused by a deficiency of steroid sulfatase, resulting in cholesterol sulfate accumulation in the stratum corneum, retained corneodesmosomes, and reduced corneocyte desquamation, Bunick said.
ARCI-LI is rarer, with a prevalence of 1:100,000, and has been linked to mutations in six genes, most commonly