

Patient Preference
SKYTROFA reduces injection burden
Up to 313 injection-free days per year with SKYTROFA1
In a clinical trial following
switch from daily
somatropin
to once-weekly
SKYTROFA (N = 146),*


children and caregivers2
CSDS-P summary score decreased by 66.7% from week 1 to week 26 (P < 0.0001)

SKYTROFA Auto-Injector
is easy to use
In the enliGHten trial,† 94% of patients (n = 115) reported‡ that SKYTROFA could be administered using the Auto-Injector without difficulty or making a mistake3
Injection training materials are well understood
In a comprehension study (N = 135),§ following a review of injection training materials and performing a simulated injection4:
≥ 95%
across all groups (HCPs, caregivers, children)
were successful in their injections4
98%
of participants reported that they could use the device safely on their own or with caregiver supervision4


Get your patients with pediatric GHD started on SKYTROFA today
Learn more- *A multicenter, phase 3, open-label, 26-week trial investigating the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of SKYTROFA administered once weekly in children with GHD. The trial included 3 treatment-naïve and 143 treatment-experienced patients previously treated with daily hGH for ≤ 130 weeks. The mean daily somatropin dose was 0.29 mg/kg/week upon entering the trial. Safety and tolerability were the primary endpoints. Patients aged 6 months to 3 years could be treatment naïve and were included only in the safety and tolerability analyses. Preference was evaluated by 2 questionnaires (one for children [PQ-C] and one for parents/caregivers [PQ-P] at weeks 6 and 13). Treatment burden was assessed using variants of the CSDS-C and CSDS-P at weeks 1 (predose), 6, 13, and 26.2
- †An open-label extension study of pediatric patients with GHD who previously participated in phase 3 SKYTROFA trials. The study enrolled a total of 298 patients: 103 patients on SKYTROFA and 55 patients on a daily somatropin from the heiGHt trial, and 140 patients on SKYTROFA from the fliGHt trial. The mean age at baseline was 9.5 years for SKYTROFA-treated patients from the heiGHt trial, 9.5 years for daily somatropin-treated patients from the heiGHt trial, and 11.1 years for patients from the fliGHt trial. Long-term safety was the primary objective.3
- ‡Patients at select US sites switched from administering SKYTROFA with a vial and syringe to the Auto-Injector (n = 160) once it became available. Patient-reported outcomes for the Auto-Injector based on the device usability questionnaire were available for 115 patients who completed the questionnaire after 13 weeks of Auto-Injector use.3
- §Participants had reviewed materials supplied with the Auto-Injector, including cartridges, packaging, IFU, QRG, a training video, and the Auto-Injector Help Line. They were then assessed on their performance of a simulated injection and charging of the Auto-Injector, as well as their comprehension of the IFU, followed by a debriefing discussion with the investigator. The participants included patients with pediatric GHD and proxy conditions including diabetes (n = 60), caregivers (n = 60), and HCPs (n = 15). Pediatric patient ages ranged from 6 to 12 years for females and 13 to 17 years for males.4