| Literature DB >> 24840367 |
Shanti Eswaran1, Amanda Guentner1, William D Chey1.
Abstract
Irritable bowel syndrome with constipation and chronic functional constipation are common digestive disorders that negatively impact quality of life and account for billions of dollars in health care costs. Related to the heterogeneity of pathogenesis that underlie these disorders and the failure of symptoms to reliably predict underlying pathophysiology, traditional therapies provide relief to only a subset of affected individuals. The evidence surrounding new and emerging pharmacologic treatments, which include both luminally and systemically acting drugs, is discussed here. These include agents such as lubiprostone, bile acid modulations, guanylate cyclase-C receptor agonists, serotonin receptor modulators and herbal therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Bile acid and salts; Constipation; Irritable bowel syndrome; Laxatives; Therapeutics
Year: 2014 PMID: 24840367 PMCID: PMC4015201 DOI: 10.5056/jnm.2014.20.2.141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurogastroenterol Motil ISSN: 2093-0879 Impact factor: 4.924
Emerging Constipation-predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome Therapies Advantages/Disadvantages
| Drug Class | Name | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bile acid modulators | CDCA | Double-blind placebo-controlled study showed acceleration in colonic transit and improved bowel function in 36 IBS-C patients. | Lower abdominal cramping/pain in over 40% of patients |
| Elobixibat (A3309) | Three phase II trials in CC patients report improvement in the number of SBMs, stool consistency and decrease in straining. | No consistent amelioration of abdominal pain or bloating, except at the 15 mg dose | |
| GC-C receptor agonist | Plecanatide | Phase III, 12 week trial comparing plecanatide vs. placebo in 951 CC patients reported that 21.5% vs. 11.5% ( | Status as a treatment option still unknown, especially for IBS-C |
| Serotonin modulators | Prucalopride | Three placebo-controlled trials in CC demonstrated a significant increase in the proportion of patients achieving at least 3 SBMs per week. | Very limited data on the impact in IBS-C |
| Mosapride | Generally well tolerated and shown in one small prospective pilot study to improve symptoms. | One small underpowered placebo controlled trial demonstrated no difference in IBS-C | |
| Pumosetrag (MKC-733) | One small single-blind clinical trial found that stool frequency increased after the first-week treatment with compared with placebo ( | Common side effects are flushing, diarrhea, headache and anorexia. | |
| Herbal medications | Daikenchuto | Appears to be safe and well tolerated. Promising in animal studies but not widely studied in clinical trials. | Not been widely studied in clinical trials but in small human trials, effects on colonic and gastric transit were not statistically significantly different from placebo. |
| Hemp seed extract | RCT with 120 CC patients for 8 weeks found responder rate for complete SBM of 43.3% with HSP, compared with 8.3% in placebo ( | More research is needed in this area. |
CDCA, chenodeoxycholic acid; IBS-C, constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome; CC, chronic constipation; SBMs, spontaneous bowel movements; GC-C, guanylate cyclase-C; RCT, radomized controlled trial; HSP, hemp seed pill.
Figure 1.Chloride channel activation in the treatment of constipation. Reprinted from Menees et al32 with permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd. ClC-2, type-2 chloride channel; CFTR, cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator; GC-C, guanylate cyclase-C; GTP, guanosine triphosphate; cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate.
Figure 2.The use of bile acids to treat constipation. Normally, bile acids are removed from the ileum via transporters to the liver as part of enterohepatic circulation, leading to reduced concentrations of bile acid reaching the colon and decreased colonic motility. Elobixibat inhibits the uptake of bile acids in the terminal ileum, which increases luminal concentration and improves colonic motility. Chenodeoxycholic acid is a bile acid analogue that increases the concentration of bile acid in the gut and promotes colonic motility. Modified from Menees et al32 with permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd.