| Literature DB >> 25258162 |
Xiaohua Hou1, Shengliang Chen, Yali Zhang, Weihong Sha, Xiaofeng Yu, Hesham Elsawah, Afifi Fahmy Afifi, Hisham Raafat El-Khayat, Alaa Nouh, Mohamed Fathalla Hassan, Ayman Abdel Fatah, Isabel Rucker Joerg, Juan Manuel Sánchez Núñez, Rodolfo Osthoff Rueda, Grazyna Jurkowska, Michal Walczak, Ewa Malecka-Panas, Krzysztof Linke, Marek Hartleb, Gwendolyn Janssen-van Solingen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25258162 PMCID: PMC4210642 DOI: 10.1007/s40261-014-0233-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Drug Investig ISSN: 1173-2563 Impact factor: 2.859
Primary and secondary objectives
| Primary objective |
| Change from baseline in IBS-QOL total score |
| Secondary objectives |
| Changes from baseline in the 8 IBS-QOL subscales (scores) |
| Change from baseline in IBS-QOL total and subscale scores within patient subgroups (IBS-C, IBS-D, IBS-M, sex and age) |
| Change from baseline in IBS symptom score: |
| abdominal pain (none/mild/moderate/severe/incapacitating) |
| stool frequency (mean number per day during last week prior to visit) |
| straining (present/absent) |
| urgency (present/absent) |
| feeling of incomplete defecation (present/absent) |
| passage of mucus (present/absent) |
| bloating or feeling of abdominal distension (present/absent) |
| Change from baseline in gastrointestinal symptoms (number of occurrences during last week prior to visit): |
| heartburn |
| early satiety |
| postprandial fullness |
| nausea |
| vomiting |
| Health economic dataa |
| Evaluate the safety of mebeverine hydrochloride/pinaverium bromide by country and overall |
IBS irritable bowel syndrome, IBS-C IBS with constipation, IBS-D IBS with diarrhoea, IBS-M IBS-mixed (constipation and diarrhoea), IBS-QOL IBS–Quality of Life
a After 8 weeks of treatment only
Fig. 1Patient disposition (all patients)
Summary of demographic data by country and overall (safety analysis set)
| Characteristic | Poland | Egypt | Mexico | China | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Sex [ | |||||
| Male | 47 (35.1) | 99 (47.4) | 25 (20.7) | 74 (51.7) | 245 (40.4) |
| Female | 87 (64.9) | 110 (52.6) | 96 (79.3) | 69 (48.3) | 362 (59.6) |
| Race [ | |||||
| Asian | 0 | 0 | 0 | 143 | 143 (23.6) |
| Black | 0 | 3 (1.4) | 0 | (100.0) | 3 (0.5) |
| White | 134 (100.0) | 0 | 15 (12.5) | 0 | 149 (24.6) |
| Other | 0 | 206 (98.6) | 105 (87.5) | 0 | 311 (51.3) |
| Unknown | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Age ( | 134 | 209 | 120 | 143 | 606 |
| Mean (SD) [years] | 43.8 (14.30) | 37.2 (10.76) | 44.4 (15.36) | 43.6 (13.94) | 41.6 (13.68) |
| Minimum, maximum (years) | 20, 74 | 19, 75 | 19, 78 | 20, 80 | 19, 80 |
| Age group [ | |||||
| 18–30 years | 26 (19.4) | 69 (33.0) | 26 (21.7) | 27 (18.9) | 148 (24.4) |
| 31–40 years | 36 (26.9) | 58 (27.8) | 30 (25.0) | 42 (29.4) | 166 (27.4) |
| 41–65 years | 63 (47.0) | 81 (38.8) | 49 (40.8) | 66 (46.2) | 259 (42.7) |
| >65 years | 9 (6.7) | 1 (0.5) | 15 (12.5) | 8 (5.6) | 33 (5.4) |
| Out of range/missing age | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Subgroup of IBS [ | |||||
| IBS-C | 21 (15.7) | 55 (26.3) | 77 (64.2) | 20 (14.0) | 173 (28.5) |
| IBS-D | 70 (52.2) | 62 (29.7) | 23 (19.2) | 97 (67.8) | 252 (41.6) |
| IBS-M | 43 (32.1) | 92 (44.0) | 20 (16.7) | 26 (18.2) | 181 (29.9) |
| Unknown | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Percentages are based on the number of patients with non-missing data in the respective group
IBS irritable bowel syndrome, IBS-C IBS with constipation, IBS-D IBS with diarrhoea, IBS-M IBS—mixed (constipation and diarrhoea), SD standard deviation
Statistical analyses of the primary objective of the change from baseline in the Irritable Bowel Syndrome–Quality of Life (IBS-QOL) total score at Weeks 4 and 8
| Visit | IBS-QOL total scorea | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poland | Egypt | Mexico | China | Overall | |
| Week 0 (baseline) | 52.0 (18.32) ( | 48.9 (18.58) ( | 51.9 (18.62) ( | 76.4 (14.18) ( | 56.4 (20.68) ( |
| Week 4 | 65.4 (17.28) ( | 63.7 (15.18) ( | 60.2 (16.56) ( | 83.7 (12.03) ( | 67.8 (17.57) ( |
| Week 8 | 75.1 (18.09) ( | 78.0 (12.36) ( | 83.8 (13.65) ( | 87.1 (11.25) ( | 80.5 (14.58) ( |
| Change from baseline to Week 4 | 13.4 (15.94)* ( | 14.9 (18.70)* ( | 8.9 (23.45)** ( | 7.7 (11.03)* ( | 11.8 (17.98)* ( |
| Change from baseline to Week 8 | 23.3 (20.44)* ( | 29.4 (19.18)* ( | 31.8 (20.89)* ( | 10.4 (11.98)* ( | 24.3 (20.13)* ( |
Data are presented as mean (standard deviation)
IBS-QOL Irritable Bowel Syndrome-Quality of Life, QoL quality of life, * p < 0.001, ** p = 0.001
aScale: 100 = best possible QOL, 0 = worst possible QoL
Fig. 2Change from baseline, in Irritable Bowel Syndrome–Quality of Life (IBS-QOL) subscale scores at Weeks 4 and 8 in Poland (a), China (b), Egypt (c) and Mexico (d)
Statistical analyses of the secondary endpoint of the change from baseline, overall, in Irritable Bowel Syndrome–Quality of Life subscale scores at Weeks 4 and 8
| Visit | IBS-QOL subscale scorea | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dysphoria | Interference with activity | Body image | Health worry | Food avoidance | Social reaction | Sexual | Relationships | |
| Week 0 (baseline) | 53.0 (23.56) ( | 54.4 (21.93) ( | 58.8 (24.87) ( | 51.8 (24.97) ( | 43.7 (25.55) ( | 63.9 (24.92) ( | 71.0 (27.97) ( | 63.8 (25.14) ( |
| Week 4 | 67.0 (19.57) ( | 64.0 (20.17) ( | 70.4 (19.78) ( | 66.6 (22.3) ( | 55.4 (24.31) ( | 73.8 (19.32) ( | 79.5 (21.13) ( | 73.5 (19.41) ( |
| Week 8 | 80.8 (16.39) ( | 78.3 (16.51) ( | 81.3 (16.89) ( | 80.5 (17.24) ( | 69.0 (21.13) ( | 84.7 (16.32) ( | 88.5 (16.92) ( | 84.4 (16.25) ( |
| Change from baseline to Week 4 | 14.4 (20.66)* ( | 10.0 (21.14)* ( | 11.7 (20.68)* ( | 15.1 (22.35)* ( | 12.1 (23.35)* ( | 10.1 (21.10)* ( | 8.4 (24.56)* ( | 10.0 (22.43)* ( |
| Change from baseline to Week 8 | 27.9 (23.79)* ( | 24.0 (21.72)* ( | 22.6 (23.39)* ( | 28.9 (25.03)* ( | 25.4 (26.16)* ( | 21.0 (22.59)* ( | 17.4 (26.57)* ( | 20.7 (23.82)* ( |
Data are presented as mean (standard deviation)
IBS-QOL Irritable Bowel Syndrome–Quality Of Life, QoL quality of life, * p < 0.001
aScale: 100 = best possible QoL, 0 = worst possible QoL
Irritable bowel syndrome symptom scores for abdominal pain/discomfort at baseline and after 4 and 8 weeks of treatment with mebeverine hydrochloride or pinaverium bromide by country and overall
| Visit | Mean abdominal pain/discomfort: IBS symptom scoresa | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poland ( | Egypt ( | Mexico ( | China ( | Overall ( | |
| Week 0 (baseline) | 2.0 (0.63) ( | 2.0 (0.66) ( | 2.3 (0.83) ( | 1.5 (0.68) ( | 2.0 (0.74) ( |
| Change from baseline to Week 4 | −0.9 (0.73) ( | −0.9 (0.77) ( | −1.4 (1.02) ( | −0.7 (0.81) ( | −0.9 (0.86) ( |
| Change from baseline to Week 8 | −1.3 (0.80) ( | −1.4 (0.78) ( | −1.9 (1.08) ( | −1.0 (0.87) ( | −1.3 (0.92) ( |
Data are presented as mean (standard deviation)
IBS irritable bowel syndrome
aScale: 0 = none, 1 = mild, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe, 4 = incapacitating
| We performed a prospective, observational cohort study in patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), diagnosed using the Rome III criteria in four countries (Poland, Egypt, Mexico and China) assessing quality of life pre- and post-treatment (at 4 and 8 weeks) using the IBS-QOL measure. |
| Treatment with mebeverine hydrochloride in Poland, Egypt and Mexico, and pinaverium bromide in China confirmed treatment effectiveness in terms of improvement in all IBS-QOL subscales and scores. Results were statistically significant and exceeded the minimal important response (≥10.2) for the IBS-QOL total score (change from baseline at Week 4). At Week 8, the increase in the IBS-QOL total score was 24.3, greatly exceeding the meaningful clinical response (considered to be an increase of at least 14). |
| The favourable safety profile of treatment with either mebeverine hydrochloride or pinaverium bromide was confirmed in this study. |