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- What is ruxolitinib cream?
- Topical JAK inhibitor in Phase 3 development for vitiligo, sponsored by Incyte.
- Is it approved?
- No, topical cream for vitiligo is investigational; oral ruxolitinib approved in US, EU, Australia.
- What is the indication?
- Vitiligo, specifically nonsegmental vitiligo in children aged 6-<12 years in Phase 3 trial.
- How does it work?
- JAK inhibitor that modulates immune-mediated destruction of melanocytes in vitiligo.
- Route of administration?
- Topical (cream); distinct from oral ruxolitinib formulation.
- Current development phase?
- Phase 3; active pediatric trial (INCB 18424-309) enrolling children 6-<12 years.
- Sponsor?
- Incyte Corporation.
- Partner?
- No partner disclosed; Novartis markets oral ruxolitinib in some regions.
- Modality?
- Small-molecule JAK inhibitor.
- Target?
- JAK pathway; specific target not disclosed in available facts.
- Trial identifier?
- 2024-513171-41-00 (Phase 3 pediatric vitiligo study).
- Key competitors?
- Povorcitinib (Incyte, Phase 3), upadacitinib (AbbVie, Phase 3), other JAK inhibitors.
- FDA approval status?
- Topical cream not approved; oral ruxolitinib approved for other indications.
- EMA approval status?
- Topical cream not approved; oral ruxolitinib approved 2025-2026.
- Australian approval status?
- Topical cream not approved; oral ruxolitinib approved and PBS-listed.
- China trial status?
- Clinical trials ongoing (NCT07576010); approval status not disclosed.
- Therapeutic class?
- Dermatologicals (D11); topical immunomodulator.
- First oral approval date?
- Australia 2016-02-01; EU 2025-2026; US approved (date not specified).
- Pediatric indication?
- Nonsegmental vitiligo in children aged 6-<12 years; Phase 3 active.
- Expected next milestone?
- Phase 3 data readout and regulatory submission timeline not yet disclosed.
- Patent status?
- Not yet disclosed in available facts.
- Peak sales projection?
- Not yet disclosed in available facts.
- Incyte's dual vitiligo strategy?
- Ruxolitinib cream (Phase 3) and povorcitinib (Phase 3) both in development.
- Unmet need addressed?
- Limited treatment options for pediatric vitiligo; need for well-tolerated, effective therapies.
- Topical vs. oral advantage?
- Topical route may offer improved tolerability and safety profile versus systemic agents.
- Commercial significance?
- Chronic disease with significant psychological impact; pediatric approval could expand addressable market substantially.