| Literature DB >> 24711710 |
Arshi Kizilbash1, C Tng Ngô-Minh2.
Abstract
Patients with chronic non-malignant pain report impairments of physical, social, and psychological well-being. The goal of pain management should include reducing pain and improving quality of life. Patients with chronic pain require medications that are able to provide adequate pain relief, have minimum dosing intervals to maintain efficacy, and avoid breakthrough pain. Tramadol has proven efficacy and a favourable safety profile. The positive efficacy and safety profile has been demonstrated historically in numerous published clinical studies as well as from post-marketing experience. It is a World Health Organization "Step 2" opioid analgesic that has been shown to be effective, well-tolerated, and valuable, where treatment with strong opioids is not required. A number of extended release formulations of Tramadol are available in Canada and the United States. An optimal extended release Tramadol formulation would be expected to provide consistent pain control with once daily dosing, few sleep interruptions, flexible dosing schedules, and no limitation on taking with meals. Appropriate treatment options should be based on the above proposed attributes. A comparative review of available extended release Tramadol formulations shows that these medications are not equivalent in their pharmacokinetic profile and this may have implications for selecting the optimal therapy for patients with pain syndromes where Tramadol is an appropriate analgesic agent. Differences in pharmacokinetics amongst the formulations may also translate into varied clinical responses in patients. Selection of the appropriate formulation by the health care provider should therefore be based on the patient's chronic pain condition, needs, and lifestyle.Entities:
Keywords: Tramadol; analgesics; chronic pain; drug delivery; opioids; pharmacokinetics
Year: 2014 PMID: 24711710 PMCID: PMC3968086 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S49502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1Schema of WHO 3-step analgesic ladder.
Note: Data from WHO http://www.who.int/cancer/palliative/painladder/en/.
Abbreviation: WHO, World Health Organization.
Tramadol extended or controlled release formulations available in Canada/United States (as of November 2013)
| Zytram XL® | Ralivia™/Ultram® ER | Tridural® | Durela® | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distributor | Purdue | Valeant | Paladin | Medical Futures Inc. |
| Manufacturer | Purdue | Valeant/PriCara-Janssen | Labopharm | Cipher |
| Formulation | Extended-release 24 hours | Extended-release 24 hours | Controlled release 24 hours | Extended-release 24 hours |
| Dose strength available | 75 mg, 100 mg, 150 mg, 200 mg, 300 mg and 400 mg | 100 mg, 200 mg and 300 mg | 100 mg, 200 mg and 300 mg | 100 mg, 200 mg and 300 mg |
| Max dose | 400 mg | 300 mg | 300 mg | 300 mg |
Note: Zytram XL® (Purdue Pharma, Pickering, ON, Canada); Ralivia™ (Valeant Pharmaceuticals, Laval, QC, Canada, trade name Ultram® ER in the US); Tridural® (Labopharm Inc., Laval, QC, Canada); and Durela® (trade name Conzip™ in US), Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc., Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
Figure 2CIP-Tramadol proprietary delivery architecture.
Note: Figure and pharmacokinetic data reproduced with permission from Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Figure 3Combined delivery mechanisms of CIP-Tramadol in the gastrointestinal tract.
Note: Pharmacokinetic data obtained from Durela® Health Canada product monograph (2011). Figure and pharmacokinetic data reproduced with permission from Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Figure 4Plasma (±)-Tramadol concentrations (ng/mL) following a single-dose oral administration of CIP-Tramadol ER capsules (300 mg).
Note: Figure and pharmacokinetic data reproduced with permission from Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Mean steady-state plasma concentrations of Tramadol following the once-daily administration of 200 mg of the formulation
| Parameter | Zytram XL® | Ultram® ER | Tridural® | Durela® |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUC0–24 (ng/mL) | NA | 5,975 | 5,991 | 6,600 |
| Cmax (ng/mL) | NA | 335 | 345 | 364 |
| Cmin (ng/mL) | NA | 187 | 157 | 165 |
| Tmax (hour) | NA | 12 | 4.0 | 9.7 |
Note: Zytram XL® (Purdue Pharma, Pickering, ON, Canada); Ralivia™ (Valeant Pharmaceuticals, Laval, QC, Canada, trade name Ultram® ER in the US); Tridural® (Labopharm Inc., Laval, QC, Canada); and Durela® (trade name Conzip™ in US), Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc., Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
Abbreviations: AUC0–24, area under curve; Cmax, peak plasma concentration; Cmin, minimum plasma concentration; Tmax, time to maximum concentration.
Figure 5Mean steady-state Tramadol plasma concentration of CIP-Tramadol ER capsules 200 mg once daily.
Note: Figure and pharmacokinetic data reproduced with permission from Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Figure 6Pharmacokinetic comparison of CIP-Tramadol and Ultram ER under fed and fasted conditions.
Note: Figure and pharmacokinetic data reproduced with permission from Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc.