Hidradenitis Suppurativa Clinical Trials 2026 — 51 Active Studies, 12 Phase 3

Monitor the full HS clinical trial pipeline: 12 Phase 3 programs from AbbVie, UCB, Incyte, Novartis, and MoonLake — plus 13 Phase 2 assets from Sanofi, Takeda, Merck, and Insmed. The BTK inhibitor remibrutinib entered Phase 3 in late 2024, making HS one of the most competitively active areas in immunology.

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The hidradenitis suppurativa trial landscape in 2026

Hidradenitis suppurativa has gone from a commercially overlooked dermatological condition to one of the most actively contested therapeutic areas in immunology. Adalimumab's (Humira) approval in 2015 validated the commercial case. Secukinumab's (Cosentyx) approval confirmed the market. Now 12 Phase 3 programs are active simultaneously — testing JAK inhibitors, BTK inhibitors, dual IL-1 blockade, IL-17A/F biologics, and oral small molecules across five major sponsors.

The field expanded materially in late 2024 when Novartis opened two Phase 3 trials of remibrutinib, a BTK inhibitor, in HS. This is the same mechanism gaining ground in autoimmune indications (CLL, lupus, Sjögren's). Its entry into Phase 3 in HS brings the total competing mechanisms to five — and raises the stakes for every existing Phase 3 asset.

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Current HS trial activity (as of March 2026)

Based on ClinicalTrials.gov data updated daily by DataLookout:

Phase Active Trials Key Sponsors & Mechanisms
Phase 3 12 Incyte (4), Novartis (3), UCB (2), AbbVie (2), MoonLake (1)
Phase 2 13 Sanofi (2), AbbVie, Merck, Insmed, Takeda, Novartis, Avalo, Incyte + 5 others
Phase 1 3 Incyte (ruxolitinib cream), UCB (lactation PK), Sonoma Bio (Treg therapy)
Observational / Registry 23 Novartis, AbbVie, academic medical centers
Total active 51 64 total including completed/terminated

Phase 3 HS trials — detailed view

All 12 active Phase 3 hidradenitis suppurativa trials as of March 2026:

NCT ID Sponsor Drug / Mechanism Status
NCT05889182 AbbVie Upadacitinib (oral JAK1) Recruiting
NCT06468228 AbbVie Lutikizumab (anti-IL-1α/β) Recruiting
NCT06212999 Incyte Povorcitinib (JAK1) — LT safety Active, not recruiting
NCT06855498 Incyte Povorcitinib (JAK1) — rollover Recruiting
NCT06959225 Incyte Ruxolitinib cream (TRuE-HS1) Recruiting
NCT06958211 Incyte Ruxolitinib cream (TRuE-HS2) Recruiting
NCT06799000 Novartis Remibrutinib (BTK) — RECHARGE 1 Recruiting
NCT06840392 Novartis Remibrutinib (BTK) — RECHARGE 2 Recruiting
NCT04179175 Novartis Secukinumab (anti-IL-17A) — LT ext. Active, not recruiting
NCT04901195 UCB Bimekizumab (anti-IL-17A/F) — LT Active, not recruiting
NCT06921850 UCB Bimekizumab — pediatric PK Recruiting
NCT07007637 MoonLake Immunotherapeutics Sonelokimab (anti-IL-17A/F/C) — LT Enrolling by invitation

The HS competitive landscape in 2026

Why HS is commercially important

Hidradenitis suppurativa affects approximately 1% of the global population and is significantly underdiagnosed. The disease burden is high — chronic pain, recurrent abscesses, and significant quality-of-life impact — but effective treatments remain limited. Adalimumab (Humira) was the first approved biologic, and secukinumab (Cosentyx) followed. Both set commercial precedent: the HS market accepts biologics at full specialty pricing ($25,000–$50,000+ annually), and the unmet need remains substantial.

Remibrutinib: BTK inhibition enters Phase 3 in HS

The most significant recent development in the HS pipeline is Novartis's decision to open two Phase 3 trials of remibrutinib — a covalent BTK inhibitor — in HS (RECHARGE 1, NCT06799000; RECHARGE 2, NCT06840392). BTK is expressed on B cells, mast cells, and macrophages and has been validated in oncology (ibrutinib, zanubrutinib). Its entry into HS Phase 3 represents a new mechanistic hypothesis: that B cell and mast cell signaling plays a meaningful role in HS pathogenesis, distinct from the TNF/IL-17/IL-1 pathways targeted by existing agents. If remibrutinib succeeds, it would be the first BTK inhibitor approved in dermatology.

Incyte's four-program strategy

Incyte is the most prolific HS sponsor by program count. Povorcitinib (selective JAK1) completed pivotal Phase 3 trials and is now in long-term safety and rollover studies. The ruxolitinib cream program (TRuE-HS1, TRuE-HS2) tests a topical JAK1/2 inhibitor — a route that avoids systemic JAK inhibition and its associated safety concerns. Four active Phase 3 programs from a single company in one indication reflects exceptional commercial conviction. Incyte is positioning itself as the HS category leader across both oral and topical mechanisms.

AbbVie's dual mechanism play

AbbVie has two Phase 3 assets in HS. Upadacitinib (Rinvoq) is a JAK1 inhibitor already approved in several inflammatory diseases — the HS Phase 3 is an indication expansion for an established compound with known safety profile. Lutikizumab targets both IL-1α and IL-1β simultaneously — a differentiated hypothesis versus TNF/IL-17 agents that have set the current standard. The dual IL-1 blockade theory is that HS is driven by upstream IL-1 signaling, and that blocking only one isoform leaves the other active.

Phase 2 pipeline: the next wave

Thirteen Phase 2 trials signal continued investment from sponsors not yet in Phase 3:

What DataLookout monitors for hidradenitis suppurativa

Configure your profile with condition and mechanism keywords for targeted HS monitoring:

Who uses HS trial monitoring

Dermatology business development teams

BD professionals at dermatology-focused pharma and biotech track competitor HS trial activity daily. A new Phase 2 registration from an emerging biotech signals a potential licensing opportunity or competitive threat years before readout. In a field where three Phase 3 programs are running simultaneously, knowing when a fourth enters Phase 2 shapes portfolio decisions early.

Immunology analysts and healthcare investors

HS is a commercially validated indication with well-established pricing. Investors tracking AbbVie, UCB, Incyte, and Sanofi use Phase 2/3 trial registrations as leading indicators of pipeline value. Status changes — particularly Phase 3 completion events or study terminations — are material information that appears in trial registry updates before press releases.

Medical affairs at HS-active companies

Medical affairs teams monitor the competitive HS pipeline to anticipate new market entrants, identify key opinion leader publication activity, and prepare for upcoming conference data presentations. Real-time trial registration monitoring ensures no competitive signal is missed.

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Frequently asked questions

How current is the hidradenitis suppurativa trial data?

Our pipeline fetches from ClinicalTrials.gov every morning. Studies posted or updated in the preceding 24 hours appear in that day's digest. ClinicalTrials.gov is updated as sponsors register new trials or submit protocol amendments, typically within 24–48 hours.

Can I track HS trials by mechanism — for example, only JAK inhibitors?

Yes. You can configure keyword profiles for specific mechanisms like "JAK inhibitor", "IL-1", or "IL-17" combined with "hidradenitis suppurativa" — so you only receive alerts for the mechanism class you're monitoring.

Does DataLookout cover pediatric hidradenitis suppurativa trials?

Yes. Pediatric extension trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov are included. Several major sponsors — including UCB and Incyte — are actively running pediatric HS trials. These appear in your daily digest when they match your search profile.

How is this different from ClinicalTrials.gov alerts?

ClinicalTrials.gov offers basic email notifications without phase filtering or organized formatting. DataLookout delivers a filtered, labeled daily digest showing only the HS trials that match your specific criteria — the professional intelligence layer on top of raw registry data.

What is remibrutinib and why is it significant for HS?

Remibrutinib is a covalent BTK (Bruton's tyrosine kinase) inhibitor developed by Novartis. BTK inhibitors have been approved in oncology (for CLL and lymphoma), but remibrutinib represents Novartis's push into autoimmune and inflammatory conditions. In HS, BTK inhibition targets B cell and mast cell signaling pathways — a different hypothesis from the TNF, IL-17, IL-1, and JAK pathways targeted by existing Phase 3 agents. Novartis opened two pivotal Phase 3 trials (RECHARGE 1 and RECHARGE 2) in HS in late 2024. If successful, remibrutinib would be the first BTK inhibitor approved in dermatology.