| Literature DB >> 28490912 |
Michael W Calik1,2.
Abstract
Narcolepsy is a neurological disease that affects 1 in 2,000 individuals and is characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS). In 60-70% of individuals with narcolepsy, it is also characterized by cataplexy or a sudden loss of muscle tone that is triggered by positive or negative emotions. Narcolepsy decreases the quality of life of the afflicted individuals. Currently used drugs treat EDS alone (modafinil/armodafinil, methylphenidate, and amphetamine), cataplexy alone ("off-label" use of antidepressants), or both EDS and cataplexy (sodium oxybate). These drugs have abuse, tolerability, and adherence issues. A greater diversity of drug options is needed to treat narcolepsy. The small molecule drug, pitolisant, acts as an inverse agonist/antagonist at the H3 receptor, thus increasing histaminergic tone in the wake promoting system of the brain. Pitolisant has been studied in animal models of narcolepsy and used in clinical trials as a treatment for narcolepsy. A comprehensive search of online databases (eg, Medline, PubMed, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library Database, Ovid MEDLINE, Europe PubMed Central, EBSCOhost CINAHL, ProQuest Research Library, Google Scholar, and ClinicalTrials.gov) was performed. Nonrandomized and randomized studies were included. This review focuses on the outcomes of four clinical trials of pitolisant to treat narcolepsy. These four trials show that pitolisant is an effective drug to treat EDS and cataplexy in narcolepsy.Entities:
Keywords: histamine; narcolepsy; pitolisant
Year: 2017 PMID: 28490912 PMCID: PMC5414617 DOI: 10.2147/NSS.S103462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Sci Sleep ISSN: 1179-1608
Pitolisant in the treatment of narcolepsy
| Trial | N | Treatment | Dose | Clinical efficacy | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-blind, sequential placebo-controlled | Placebo | 1 wk | |||
| 21 adults | |||||
| Pitolisant | 40 mg 1 wk | Decreased ESS scores and diurnal sleep episodes and duration; no change in nocturnal sleep duration and WASO number/duration | Headache, nausea, insomnia, malaise, hallucination, sweating | ||
| Double-blind, randomized, parallel placebo-controlled | 30 adults | Placebo | 8 wk | Headache | |
| 31 adults | Pitolisant | Up to 40 mg flexible dosing for 3 wk, stable dosing for 5 wks | Decreased ESS and SART scores and daily cataplexy rate; increased MWT scores | Headache, insomnia, abdominal discomfort, nausea | |
| 33 adults | Modafinil | Up to 400 mg flexible dosing for 3 wk, stable dosing for 5 wk | Decreased ESS and SART scores, and increased MWT scores, but not noninferior to pitolisant | Headache, abdominal discomfort, nausea, diarrhea, dizziness, anxiety, irritability | |
| Double-blind, randomized, parallel placebo-controlled | 54 adults | Placebo | 7 wk | Decreased weekly cataplexy rate (placebo effect) | Headache, somnolence, irritability, apathy, dizziness |
| 51 adults | Pitolisant | Up to 40 mg flexible dosing for 3 wk, stable dosing for 4 wk | Decreased weekly cataplexy rate, hallucinations, depression, and ESS scores; increased MWT scores; no change in duration of night awakenings, and hematological or cardiovascular parameters | Headache, somnolence, irritability, anxiety, nausea, apathy, dizziness | |
| Open-label | 4 teenagers | Pitolisant alone, or concomitant use with other narcoleptic drugs | Up to 40 mg to achieve clinical efficacy; 9–24 mo | Decreased adapted ESS scores; no changes in sleep measurements; reduced frequency and intensity of cataplexy in two teenagers | Insomnia, headache, hot flushes, leg pain, hallucinations |
| Open-label | 89 adults | Pitolisant alone, or concomitant use with other narcoleptic drugs | Up to 36 mg to achieve clinical efficacy; 12 mo | 21 individuals dropped out due to lack of efficacy; decreased ESS scores; reduced partial and total cataplexy attacks and hallucinations | Headache, insomnia, anxiety, weight gain, depression |
| Open-label | 61 adults | Pitolisant | 24 individuals stopped treatment due to lack of efficacy or side effects; decreased subjective sleepiness and ESS scores | Insomnia, headache, lack of appetite, nausea | |
Abbreviations: ESS, Epworth Sleepiness Scale; mo, months; MWT, maintenance of wakefulness; SART, sustained attention to response task; WASO, wake after sleep onset; wk, weeks