| Literature DB >> 21151683 |
Tisha N Lunsford1, Lucinda A Harris.
Abstract
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic disorder that affects primarily female patients and is thought also to afflict approximately 7%-10% of the population of the Western World. Although bowel habits may change over the course of years, patients with IBS are characterized according to their predominant bowel habit, constipation (IBS-C), diarrhea (IBS-D), or mixed type (IBS-M), and treatments are focused toward the predominant symptom. Current treatments for IBS-C have included fiber, antispasmodics, osmotic and stimulant laxatives, and the now severely limited 5-HT(4) agonist tegaserod. No one agent has been universally successful in the treatment of this bothersome syndrome and the search for new agents continues. Lubiprostone (Amitiza(®)), a novel compound, is a member of a new class of agents called prostones and was approved for the treatment of chronic idiopathic constipation in 2006 at a dose of 24 μg twice daily and then in 2008 for the treatment of IBS-C in women only at a dose of 8 μg twice daily. Its purported mechanism is as a type 2 chloride channel activator, but recent evidence suggests that it may also work at the cystic fibrosis transport receptor. This article will compare the newly proposed mechanism of action of this compound to the purported mechanism and review the structure, pharmacology, safety, efficacy, and tolerability of this new therapeutic option. Clinical trial data leading to the approval of this agent for the treatment of IBS-C and the gender-based understanding of IBS, as well as this agent's place among existing and emerging therapies, will be examined.Entities:
Keywords: functional bowel disorder; large intestine; therapy
Year: 2010 PMID: 21151683 PMCID: PMC2990905 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S4537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Definition of IBS – American College of Gastroenterology and Rome III definition with Bristol Stool Form Scale
| American College of Gastroenterology | Rome III definition |
|---|---|
| Abdominal pain or discomfort associated with altered bowel function without evidence of biochemical or structural abnormality. | IBS with constipation (IBS-C) – hard or lumpy stools IBS with diarrhea (IBS-D) – loose (mushy) or watery stools Mixed IBS (IBS-M) – hard or lumpy stools Unsubtyped IBS (IBS-U) – insufficient abnormality of stool consistency to meet criteria IBS-C, D or M. |
Bristol Stool Form Scale 1–2 [separate hard lumps like nuts (difficult to pass) or sausage shaped but lumpy];
Bristol Stool Form Scale 6–7 (fluffy pieces with ragged edges, a mushy stool or watery, no solid pieces, entirely liquid);
In the absence of use of antidiarrheals or laxatives.
Criteria must have been present for at least 3 days out of the past 3 months and have an onset >6 months before diagnosis.
Figure 1Chemical structure of lubiprostone (RU-0211) (C20H32F2O5).
Note: Drug bank: accession number DB01046; CAS registry number 136790-76-6.
Figure 2Mechanism of action of lubiprostone across the intestinal epithelial cell. Copyright ©2004. Adapted with permission from American Physiological Society. Cuppoletti J, Malinowska DH, Tewari KP, et al. SPI-0211 activates T84 cell chloride transport and recombinant human ClC-2 chloride currents. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2004;287(5):C1173–C1183.
Abbreviations: Cl−, chloride; H2O, water; K+, potassium; Na+, sodium; ClC-2, type 2 chloride channel.
Safety profile of lubiprostone compared in chronic constipation and IBS-C in phase II and phase III trials
| Symptom | Placebo *CC N = 346 (%) | Lubiprostone 24 μg twice daily N = 1113 (%) | Placebo **IBS N = 435 (%) | Lubiprostone 8 μg twice daily N = 1011 (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nausea | 16 (5.1) | 346 (31.1) | 17 (4) | 81 (8) |
| Diarrhea | 3 (0.9) | 147 (13.2) | 17 (4) | 71 (7) |
| Headache | 21 (6.6) | 147 (13.2) | No reported | Not reported |
| Abdominal distention | 9 (2.2) | 79 (7.1) | 22 (5) | 50 (5) |
| Abdominal pain | 7 (2.8) | 75 (6.7) | 9 (2) | 30 (3) |
| Flatulence | 6 (1.9) | 68 (6.1) | Not reported | Not reported |
| Vomiting | 3 (0.9) | 51(4.6) | Not reported | Not reported |
| Dizziness | 4 (1.3) | 46 (4.1) | Not reported | Not reported |
| The Bristol Stool Form Scale | |
|---|---|
| Type | Description |
| 1. | Separate hard lumps like nuts (difficult to pass) |
| 2. | Sausage shaped but lumpy |
| 3. | Like sausage but with cracks on its surface |
| 4. | Like sausage or snake, smooth and soft |
| 5. | Soft blobs with clear cut edges (passed easily) |
| 6. | Fluffy pieces with ragged edges, a mushy stool |
| 7. | Watery, no solid pieces, entirely liquid |