The first and only treatment for adults with moderate-to-severe Chronic Hand Eczema (CHE)1,2
Actor portrayals.
Demonstrated
safety profile1,3
The 52-week safety profile was
generally consistent with week 164†
In the DELTA 3 open-label extension, eczema herpeticum was observed in one
subject and herpes zoster was observed in two subjects treated with ANZUPGO.
Adverse reactions1
that were reported in ≤1% of DELTA 1 and DELTA 2 subjects from the ANZUPGO group included application site pain, paresthesia, pruritus, erythema, and bacterial skin infections, including finger cellulitis, paronychia, other skin infections, leukopenia, and neutropenia.
In the Prescribing Information1:
No boxed warning
No known drug-drug interactions‡
No contraindications
No required routine lab monitoring
No boxed warning
No known drug-drug interactions‡
No contraindications
No required routine lab monitoring
See Important Safety Information for ANZUPGO below.
Low
Rates of Discontinuation due to AEs5
ANZUPGO vs cream vehicle at Week 16
- 0.5% vs 3.4%
Low
Rates of application site paresthesia (e.g., stinging and burning) and pain4
ANZUPGO vs cream vehicle at Week 16
- Paresthesia: 0.5% vs 0.6%
- Pain: 0.6% vs 0.6%
Low
Rates of Discontinuation due to AEs5
ANZUPGO vs cream vehicle at Week 16
- 0.5% vs 3.4%
Low
Rates of application site paresthesia (e.g., stinging and burning) and pain4
ANZUPGO vs cream vehicle at Week 16
- Paresthesia: 0.5% vs 0.6%
- Pain: 0.6% vs 0.6%
†Evaluated in DELTA 3, an open label extension with 801 subjects treated for up to an additional 36 weeks after completing DELTA 1 or DELTA 2.
‡Conducted in in-vitro studies.
Before & after images
See the difference that ANZUPGO made in the hands of these patients
Specifically formulated for hands
ANZUPGO was formulated specifically to take on CHE