Janus kinase (JAK) 1 and 2 mediate the signalling of cytokines and growth factors which are important for the process of haematopoiesis and immune function. Janus kinase inhibitors downregulate these inflammatory cytokines, which can be a useful mechanism of action in a variety of immune-mediated conditions including graft-versus-host disease, atopic dermatitis, and vitiligo.
What are the precautions and contraindications with ruxolitinib?
Contraindications
Hypersensitivity reactions to ruxolitinib or any of its excipients.
Avoid use in patients with active serious infections.
Precautions for ruxolitinib
History of serious, recurrent, or opportunistic infections, or tuberculosis exposure (due to risk of infection).
Patients who are current or ex-smokers (due to malignancy and cardiovascular risk).
Recommended not to breastfeed while using.
Other precautions for oral ruxolitinib:
Pre-treatment blood tests are recommended: full blood count, renal, and liver function tests.
After six months of treatment, tapering can be trialled every 8 weeks from 10 mg oral twice daily, to 5 mg twice daily, to 5mg once daily.
Topical ruxolitinib is available as 1.5% cream. Recommended dosing:
Atopic dermatitis: thin layer twice daily on affected areas (<20% BSA)
Vitiligo: thin layer twice daily on affected areas (<10% BSA).
Use in specific populations
Table 1. Dermatological use and dosing of ruxolitinib in specific populations
Population
Recommendation
Pregnancy
Category C. Animal studies suggest risk: oral ruxolitinib is able to cross the placenta and is associated with reduced foetal weight in rats and rabbits although no treatment-related malformations were reported.
Breastfeeding
No human data; uncertain if drug present in human milk.
Manufacturer recommends discontinuation of either topical/oral ruxolitinib use or breastfeeding. Breastfeeding can recommence ~4 weeks after the last dose.
Paediatric
Safety and efficacy in patients 12 years of age not established.
Geriatric
No overall differences observed in patients >65 years using ruxolitinib for atopic dermatitis (topical) or for chronic GVHD (oral).
Insufficient numbers to determine differences in vitiligo or acute GVHD.
Renal impairment
Avoid oral ruxolitinib in patients with CrCl 15mL/min, not on dialysis. Low oral dose may be administered after dialysis sessions.
Reduce dose in patients with CrCl of 15–59 mL/min: 5 mg oral once daily for acute GVHD or 5 mg oral twice daily for chronic GVHD.
Hepatic impairment
If advanced liver GVHD: 5mg oral once daily for acute GVHD; no specific recommendation for chronic GVHD, but adjustment based on more frequent blood tests is advised.
No dose adjustment required for other forms of liver disease.
What are the benefits of ruxolitinib?
Oral ruxolitinib
Table 2. Evidence from REACH1-3 trials of oral ruxolitinib for steroid-refractory graft-versus-host disease (GVHD)*
Clinical trial
Response
Phase 2 trial for acute GVHD
39/71 patients reached overall response after 28 days and 19 patients achieved complete response.
Phase 3 trial for acute GVHD
Overall response rate at 28 days was higher in the ruxolitinib group (96/154) than the control group (61/155).
Phase 3 trial for chronic GVHD
Overall response rate at 24 weeks was higher in the ruxolitinib group (82/165) than the control group which received best available other therapy (42/164).
In phase 3 randomised, double-blind studies, improvement in Investigator’s Global Assessment (IGA) scores at week 8 was higher with ruxolitinib compared to vehicle (in > 12-year-old patients).
Treatment success was achieved by 39–50% of the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream group, 51.3–53.8% of the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream group, and 7.6–15.1% of the vehicle group.
Response was dose-related and higher rates of rapid itch reduction (within 12 hours of first application) were reported in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream group.
In a randomised phase 2 trial, ≥50% improvement in facial vitiligo area scoring index (F-VASI50) at week 24 was higher with ruxolitinib vs vehicle (in adult patients).
F-VASI50 was achieved by 45–50% of those using 1.5% ruxolitinib cream once daily (n = 30) or twice daily (n = 33) vs 1/32 (3%) of the vehicle cream group.
What are the disadvantages of ruxolitinib?
Monitoring requirements including periodic blood tests (every 1–2 weeks until dose of oral ruxolitinib stabilised) and clinical review including history, examination, and skin checks for any evidence of infection or malignancy.
What are the side effects and risks of ruxolitinib?
Adverse effects are more common for oral than topical ruxolitinib, and may include:
Haematological (dose-related): thrombocytopaenia, anaemia, and neutropaenia.
Infections (viral, bacterial, mycobacterial, or fungal), such as:
Approved datasheets are the official source of information for medicines, including approved uses, doses, and safety information. Check the individual datasheet in your country for information about medicines.
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