Icotrokinra results show significant skin clearance in patients with difficult-to-treat scalp and genital psoriasis

In This Article:

66% of patients with scalp psoriasis and 77% with genital psoriasis treated with investigational icotrokinra achieved site-specific clear or almost clear skin at Week 16

Icotrokinra continues to demonstrate a standout combination of significant skin clearance (IGA 0/1) and a favorable safety profile in a once daily pill

SPRING HOUSE, Pa., May 9, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) today announced new data from the Phase 3 ICONIC-TOTALa study investigating icotrokinra (JNJ-2113), the first-in-class investigational targeted oral peptide that selectively blocks the IL-23 receptor. The study evaluated adults and adolescents 12 years of age and older with body surface area as low as 1% and at least moderate plaque psoriasis (PsO) affecting high-impact skin sites.

(PRNewsfoto/Johnson & Johnson)
(PRNewsfoto/Johnson & Johnson)

Data presented at the 2025 Society for Investigative Dermatology (SID) Annual Meeting show 57% of patients treated with once daily icotrokinra achieved the study's primary endpoint with an Investigator's Global Assessment (IGA)b score of 0/1 (clear or almost clear skin) and a ≥2-grade improvement from baseline at Week 16 compared to 6% of patients receiving placebo (P<0.001).1

Icotrokinra demonstrated high rates of skin clearance in patients with scalp psoriasis as 66% achieved a scalp-specific Investigator's Global Assessment (ss-IGA)c score of 0/1 compared to 11% receiving placebo (P<0.001) at Week 16. At the same time point, among patients with genital psoriasis, 77% treated with icotrokinra achieved a static Physician's Global Assessment of Genitalia (sPGA-G)d score of 0/1 compared to 21% receiving placebo (P<0.001).i In the smaller subset of patients with hand/foot psoriasis, treatment with icotrokinra showed a numerically higher rate of skin clearance at Week 16 with 42% achieving a hand and/or foot Physician's Global Assessment (hf-PGA)e score of 0/1 compared to 26% receiving placebo.

"While plaque psoriasis can appear in any location on the body, most high-impact skin sites affect areas critical for mobility, personal care, and intimacy, and can be very challenging to treat effectively. Notably, almost 80% of psoriasis patients experience scalp involvement," said Melinda Gooderham, MSc, MD, FRCPC, SKiN Centre for Dermatology, Queen's University, and Probity Medical Research, Peterborough, ON, Canada and ICONIC-TOTAL study investigator.f "Results from the ICONIC-TOTAL study demonstrate impressive rates of skin clearance in these difficult-to-treat areas and show the potential for treatment with icotrokinra to offer patients a novel therapeutic option that aligns with their treatment needs and preferences."