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NCT07270003
A Prospective, Single-arm, Open-label Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Ivarmacitinib in the Treatment of Palmoplantar Pustulosis
NA trial testing Ivarmacitinib in Palmoplantar Pustulosis (PPP) in 60 participants. Currently enrolling.
1 October 2026
Quick facts
| Lead sponsor | Xijing Hospital |
|---|---|
| Phase | NA |
| Status | Recruiting now |
| Study type | INTERVENTIONAL |
| Allocation | na |
| Design | single group |
| Masking | none |
| Primary purpose | treatment |
| Enrollment | 60 |
| Start date | 1 October 2025 |
| Primary completion | 1 October 2026 |
| Estimated completion | 1 October 2026 |
| Sites | 1 location across China |
Drugs / interventions tested
- Ivarmacitinib — full drug profile →
Conditions studied
- Palmoplantar Pustulosis (PPP) — all drugs for Palmoplantar Pustulosis (PPP) →
Sponsor
Xijing Hospital
Who can join
18 and older, any sex, with Palmoplantar Pustulosis (PPP). Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.
Sponsor's own description
What's the problem? Palmoplantar pustulosis (PPP) is a long-term skin condition that mainly affects the palms of hands and soles of feet. It causes red, scaly skin with small, non-infectious blisters (called pustules), and often brings pain, itching, or even joint damage over time. It's more common in women aged 40-58 and makes daily life harder. Right now, treatments for PPP aren't great. Creams (like corticosteroids) make symptoms come back fast. Pills (such as acitretin) work slowly, don't always help, and can have bad side effects. Some strong injectable drugs (biologics) are expensive, need long-term use, and require regular checks for infections-plus they don't work well for many PPP patients. What's this study trying to do? This study will test a new pill called ivarmacitinib to see if it works for PPP, and if it's safe. Here's what researchers want to find out: Does ivarmacitinib reduce PPP symptoms (like blisters and redness)-and how quickly? Does it help with joint problems that sometimes come with PPP? Are there side effects (like infections, headaches, or stomach issues)? And how common or serious are they? Do things like a patient's age, past treatments, or other health issues affect how well ivarmacitinib works? How will the study work? This is a open study (everyone knows they're taking ivarmacitinib) with 60 patients at the First Affiliated Hospital of Air Force Medical University (China). Who can join? Must be 18 or older, with a confirmed PPP diagnosis. Tried at least one other standard treatment (like pills or creams) that didn't work or caused too many side effects. Must not have serious health issues like active infections (e.g., tuberculosis, hepatitis), low blood cell counts, or bad liver/kidney problems. What will patients do? Take one 4mg ivarmacitinib pill every day for 12 weeks. Can't use other drugs or light therapy for PPP during this time (but simple moisturizers or meds for other health issues are okay). Before the study starts: Doctors will check basic health (age, weight, lifestyle), PPP symptoms, and do blood tests, urine tests, and a chest X-ray. During the study (Weeks 1, 2, 4, 8, 12): Doctors will check how symptoms are changing, ask if patients have any side effects, and do another round of blood tests at Week 12. What will researchers look for? Does it work? The main goal is to see how many patients have a 50% or bigger reduction in PPP symptoms by Week 12. They'll also check if symptoms get 75% or 90% better, if joints feel better, and if daily life (like working or sleeping) improves. Is it safe? Researchers will track all side effects-especially infections, blood clots, stomach aches, or headaches-and how serious they are.
Publications & conference data
No peer-reviewed publications indexed yet for this trial.
Verify or expand the search:
- PubMed search for NCT07270003
- Europe PMC full search
- ASCO Meeting Library
- ESMO Meeting Library
- bioRxiv preprints
- medRxiv preprints
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- NCT07381114 — A Clinical Study on the Efficacy and Safety of Ivarmacitinib in Preventing aGVHD After HLA-matched Transplantation · Phase 1, PHASE2 · not yet recruiting
- NCT07313202 — Ivarmacitinib in Advanced Solid Tumors: A Prospective, Two-Cohort, Two-Phase Exploratory Study in Patients Discontinued · Phase 2 · not yet recruiting
Other Xijing Hospital trials
Trials by the same sponsor.
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Verify against primary sources
- ClinicalTrials.gov — authoritative US registry record
- WHO ICTRP — international registry index
- EU Clinical Trials Register
- Sponsor press releases (Google)
- Trial protocol + status: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT07270003 (US National Library of Medicine, public domain)
- Drug + disease cross-links: matched in real time against Drug Landscape's normalised drug + company + condition tables
- Sponsor: as reported to ClinicalTrials.gov by Xijing Hospital
- Last refreshed: 8 December 2025
Drug Landscape aggregates and links these public records for informational use only. Always verify against the primary source before clinical or regulatory decisions. Canonical URL: https://druglandscape.com/trial/NCT07270003.
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