| Literature DB >> 20448801 |
Abstract
Raynaud's phenomenon is a common condition characterized by vasospasm of the digital arteries and resulting cyanosis and redness. It often does not require pharmacologic management, but in some cases symptoms are severe and pharmacologic management is necessary. Calcium channel blockers are often used first-line, but in some patients are ineffective. Patients with severe symptoms or intolerance to available therapies have prompted exploration of alternative therapies, including endothelin antagonists, phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors, antioxidants, newer vasodilators, statins, and botulinum toxin. These newer therapies provide the focus for this review.Entities:
Keywords: Raynaud; bosentan; iloprost; phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20448801 PMCID: PMC2860448 DOI: 10.2147/vhrm.s4551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Summary of intravenous iloprost clinical trials on Raynaud’s phenomenon (RP)
| 131 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | Iloprost 0.5–2 ng/kg/min IV infusion over 6 hours on 5 consecutive days | Frequency and severity reduced | |
| 35 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | Iloprost 0.5–2 ng/kg/min over 6 h on 5 consecutive days | Complete digital ulcer healing with iloprost | |
| 13 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Iloprost 0.5–2 ng/kg/min over 6 h on 5 consecutive days | Frequency reduced | |
| 29 patients 26 secondary RP 3 primary RP | Randomized Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Iloprost 0.5–2 ng/kg/min over 6 h on 3 consecutive days | Frequency and severity reduced | |
| 12 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Iloprost 1–3 ng/kg/min over 5 hours on 3 consecutive days | Frequency and severity decreased with iloprost | |
| 55 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind | Iloprost 0.5 ng/kg/min or Iloprost 2 ng/kg/min over 6 h on 3 consecutive days | Frequency, severity, duration, and digital skin lesions reduced to similar extent with low dose and high dose | |
| 46 patients secondary RP | Randomized single-blind | Iloprost 2 ng/kg/min over 8 h on 5 consecutive days, then over 8 hrs on 1 day every 6 weeks or Nifedipine 40 mg/day | Skin scores reduced to greater extent with iloprost than nifedipine | |
| 23 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind double-dummy | Iloprost 0.5–2 ng/kg/min for 8 hours on 3 consecutive days, repeated at week 8 or Nifedipine 10 mg 3 times daily × 4 weeks, then 20 mg 3 times daily × 12 weeks | Frequency, duration, severity, and incidence of digital lesions reduced to comparable extent with iloprost and nifedipine |
Summary of bosentan clinical trials on Raynaud’s phenomenon (RP)
| 122 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | Bosentan 62.5 mg twice daily × 4 weeks, then 125 mg twice daily × 12 weeks | Fewer new digital ulcers per patient with bosentan (primary study outcome; mean of 1.4 new ulcers per patient on bosentan vs 2.7 new ulcers per patient on placebo [ | |
| 188 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | Bosentan 62.5 mg twice daily × 4 weeks, then 125 mg twice daily × 20–32 weeks | Fewer new digital ulcers per patient with bosentan (primary study outcome; mean of 1.9 new ulcers per patient on bosentan vs 2.7 new ulcers per patient on placebo [ |
Summary of phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor clinical trials on Raynaud’s phenomenon (RP) with clinical endpoints
| 20 patients 16 secondary RP 2 primary RP | Randomized double-blind crossover placebo-controlled | Sildenafil 50 mg twice daily × 4 weeks | Frequency and duration reduced | |
| 20 patients primary RP | Randomized double-blind crossover Placebo-controlled | Sildenafil 50 mg twice daily × 2 weeks | No difference between sildenafil and placebo in blood flow, disability, pain, or RCS | |
| 19 patients secondary RP | Open-label | Sildenafil 25 to 150 mg/day for up to 6 months | Mean number of ulcers reduced VAS scores for RP, pain, and activity were improved | |
| 10 patients secondary RP | Open-label | Sildenafil 25 mg 3 time s daily × 6 weeks initiated following 5 days of IV iloprost therapy | Symptomatic improvement and ulcer healing in approximately half | |
| 25 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind cross-over | Tadalafil 20 mg or placebo every other day × 6 weeks | Frequency and duration reduced | |
| 39 patients secondary RP | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled cross-over | Tadalafil 20 mg daily × 4 weeks | No significant differences from placebo in RCS or RP frequency or duration | |
| 14 patients secondary RP | Active-controlled | Tadalafil 20 mg 2 to 3 times per week × 4 weeks (9 patients) or pentoxifylline 600 mg twice daily × 4 weeks (5 patients) | RCS improved with tadalafil compared with pentoxifylline | |
| 12 patients secondary RP | Open-label | Tadalafil 10 or 20 mg every other day × 6 weeks | Ulcer healing observed | |
| 40 patients 33 secondary RP 7 primary RP | Open-label | Vardenafil 10 mg twice daily × 2 weeks | RCS reduced | |
Abbreviations and notes: RCS, Raynaud’s Condition Score (patient assessment of the extent to which they felt handicapped by Raynaud attacks daily based on frequency, total daily duration, and severity of attacks using a 10-point scale; 0 points, subject felt not handicapped by Raynaud attacks; 10 points, subject felt extremely handicapped); HAQ, Health Assessment Questionnaire.
Newer therapies with demonstrated efficacy in Raynaud’s phenomenon
| MQX-503 | Nitrate | Topical | Primary and secondary | Reduced attack severity |
| Iloprost | Prostaglandin analog | Intravenous | Secondary | Reduced duration, frequency, and severity of attacks; improved ulcer healing |
| Bosentan | Endothelin receptor antagonist | Oral | Secondary | Reduced number of new digital ulcers |
| Sildenafil | Phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor | Oral | Secondary | Reduced duration, frequency, and severity of attacks; improved ulcer healing |
| Tadalafil | Phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor | Oral | Secondary | Reduced duration, frequency, and severity of attacks; improved ulcer healing |