| Literature DB >> 25135384 |
Anne Z DePriest1, Katie Miller.
Abstract
The use of opioids in the treatment of chronic pain is widespread; the prevalence of specific opioids varies from country to country and depends on product availability, national formulary systems, and provider preferences. Patients often receive opioids for legitimate treatment of pain conditions, but on the opposite side of the spectrum, nonmedical use of opioids is a significant public health concern. Opioids are associated with several side effects, and constipation is the most commonly reported and persistent symptom. Unlike some adverse effects associated with opioid use, tolerance does not develop to constipation. Opioid-induced constipation (OIC) is the most prevalent patient complaint associated with opioid use and has been associated with declines in various quality of life measures. OIC can be extremely difficult for patients to tolerate and may prompt patients to decrease or discontinue opioid treatment. Current management strategies for OIC are often insufficient. A prolonged-release formulation of oxycodone/naloxone (OXN) has been investigated for the treatment of nonmalignant and cancer pain and mitigation of OIC, and evidence is largely favorable. Studies have demonstrated the capability of OXN to alleviate OIC while maintaining pain control comparable to oxycodone-only regimens. There is insufficient evidence for OXN efficacy for patients with mild OIC or patients maintained on high doses of opioids, and use in these populations is controversial. The reduction of costs associated with OIC may provide overall cost effectiveness with OXN. Additionally, the presence of naloxone may deter abuse/misuse by those seeking to misuse the formulation by modes of administration other than oral ingestion. Most studies to date have occurred in European countries, and phase 3 trials continue in the United States. This review will include current therapeutic options for pain and constipation, unique characteristics of OXN, evidence related to use of OXN and its place in therapy, discussion of opioid abuse/misuse, and various abuse-deterrent mechanisms, and areas of continuing research.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25135384 PMCID: PMC4108020 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-014-0026-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
A summary of clinical studies for OXN
| Study | Study type | Population | Intervention | Dose limit (mg/day) | Laxative regimen | Primary endpoint(s) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OXN3401 (Clinicaltrials.gov #NCT01971632) [ | Randomized controlled study | 463 patients with chronic nonmalignant pain receiving opioids for at least 2 weeks prior to the study | Pre-randomization: Conversion and titration for OC 12-week double-blind phase: OXN, OC PR, or placebo 1-year extension phase: Open-label OXN | 40 | Laxative use allowed but not specifically described | Analgesia: Time from initial dose to recurrent pain events (inadequate pain control) | Analgesia: A statistically significant ( |
| OXN3001 (Clinicaltrials.gov #NCT00412152) [ | Randomized controlled study | 322 patients with chronic nonmalignant pain and OIC, requiring OC 20–50 mg/day | Pre-randomization: Conversion and titration for OC 12-week double-blind phase: OXN or OC PR 52-week extension phase: Open-label OXN | 50 | Oral bisacodyl was allowed but not specifically described | Bowel function: BFI after 4 weeks | Bowel function: Mean BFI improved by −26.9 points (from 61.8 to 34.9) for OXN group and −9.4 points (from 61.0 to 51.6) for OC PR group ( |
| OXN3006 (Clinicaltrials.gov #NCT00412100) [ | Randomized controlled study | 265 patients with chronic nonmalignant pain and OIC, requiring OC 60–80 mg/day | Pre-randomization: Conversion and titration for OC 12-week double-blind phase: OXN or OC PR 52-week extension phase: Open-label OXN | 120 | Laxatives allowed only after 72 h following last bowel movement or if patient experienced discomfort. Bisacodyl 10 mg allowed up to 5/day for 7 consecutive days. If no bowel movement occurred in 24 h following two doses of bisacodyl (total 48 h), an enema was allowed | Bowel function: BFI | Bowel function: Mean BFI improved by −26.5 points (from 67.4 to 40.9) for OXN group and −10.8 points (from 64.1 to 53.3) for OC PR group after 4 weeks. Difference in mean BFI scores between two groups throughout 4 weeks was statistically significant (−14.9, |
| (Clinicaltrials.gov #NCT00412100, #NCT00412152) [ | Pooled analysis of two randomized controlled studies | 581 patients with chronic nonmalignant pain; pooled data for OXN3001 and OXN3006 | Pre-randomization: Conversion and titration for OC 12-week double-blind phase: OXN or OC PR | 120 | Oral bisacodyl 5–10 mg after 72 h following last bowel movement or if patient experienced discomfort | Analgesia: Average pain over last 24 h (Pain Intensity Scale) over 12 weeks | Analgesia: Mean pain intensity scores were stable throughout the double-blind phase and similar between treatment groups. No statistically significant differences were observed ( |
| (Clinicaltrials.gov #NCT01971632, #NCT00412152) [ | Observational extension study | 379 patients with chronic nonmalignant pain; extensions of OXN 3401 and OXN3001 | Open label OXN up to 52 weeks | 80 | Bisacodyl oral during first 7 days; thereafter, other laxatives were allowed as needed after consultation with investigator | Analgesia: BPI-SF; Change in OXN dose; Average pain over last 24 h (Pain Intensity Scale);Frequency of analgesic rescue dose/day Bowel function: BFI Safety | Analgesia: BPI-SF items were low and stable over course of study. 53.8% patients remained on same OXN dose received during double-blind phase. Mean total daily dose of oxycodone increased from 35.6 to 43.7 mg at end of study Bowel function: Persistent effect on BFI from 35.6 to 20.6 (average 15-point reduction in score) Safety: Adverse effects were similar to opioid therapy, with no additional safety concerns identified |
BFI Bowel Function Index, BPI-SF Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form, NX naloxone, OC oxycodone, OIC opioid-induced constipation, OXN oxycodone/naloxone, PR prolonged-release