| Literature DB >> 29799099 |
José López-Cedrún1, Sebastián Videla2,3, Miguel Burgueño4, Inma Juárez5, Samir Aboul-Hosn6, Rafael Martín-Granizo7, Joan Grau8, Miguel Puche9, José-Luis Gil-Diez10, José-Antonio Hueto11, Anna Vaqué12, Mariano Sust12, Carlos Plata-Salamán12, Antoni Monner5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Co-crystal of tramadol-celecoxib (CTC), containing equimolar quantities of the active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) tramadol and celecoxib (100 mg CTC = 44 mg rac-tramadol hydrochloride and 56 mg celecoxib), is a novel API-API co-crystal for the treatment of pain. We aimed to establish the effective dose of CTC for treating acute pain following oral surgery.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29799099 PMCID: PMC5995791 DOI: 10.1007/s40268-018-0235-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs R D ISSN: 1174-5886
Fig. 1Study flow chart. CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, FAS full analysis set, PP per-protocol, SAS safety analysis set, VAS visual analogue scale
Patients’ characteristics at baseline (full analysis set)
| Placebo ( | CTC | Tramadol 100 mg ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 mg ( | 100 mg ( | 150 mg ( | 200 mg ( | |||
| Age (years) | 23.3 (4.8) | 25.2 (5.8) | 25.1 (5.6) | 24.8 (5.7) | 23.7 (6.2) | 24.9 (5.6) |
| Male, | 14 (25.9) | 31 (56.4) | 23 (43.4) | 25 (43.9) | 23 (40.4) | 26 (44.8) |
| Caucasian, | 53 (98.1) | 54 (98.2) | 51 (96.2) | 56 (98.2) | 56 (98.2) | 57 (98.3) |
| Height (m) | 168.4 (8.9) | 171.1 (8.6) | 168.1 (9.4) | 170.1 (8.6) | 168.5 (9.5) | 168.4 (10.5) |
| Weight (kg) | 66.0 (15.1) | 72.3 (13.6) | 66.5 (12.1) | 69.2 (13.9) | 63.5 (11.8) | 67.5 (14.6) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 23.2 (4.8) | 24.6 (3.9) | 23.5 (3.5) | 23.8 (3.7) | 22.3 (3.2) | 23.6 (3.6) |
Data shown are mean (standard deviation) unless otherwise indicated
BMI body mass index, CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib
Fig. 2Sum of pain intensity difference (mean + SEM) up to 8 h post-dose (LOCF; PP analysis set). *p < 0.05, significantly better vs. placebo. #p < 0.05, significantly better vs. tramadol (p values from ANOVA with treatment and centre as factors). ANOVA analysis of variance, CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, LOCF last observation carried forward, PP per-protocol, SEM standard error of mean, SPID sum of pain intensity difference
Pain intensity and pain relief efficacy endpoints (LOCF; PP analysis set)
| Efficacy endpoint | Placebo ( | CTC | Tramadol 100 mg ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 mg ( | 100 mg ( | 150 mg ( | 200 mg ( | |||
| SPID | ||||||
| 0–8 h | 71 (213) | −21 (243) | −90 (234)*,# | −139 (227)*,# | −173 (224)*,# | 22 (228) |
| 0–12 h | 118 (328) | −23 (377) | −133 (363)*,# | −206 (343)*,# | −251 (344)*,# | 30 (353) |
| PID | ||||||
| At 8 h | 11.7 (30) | 1.6 (33) | −8.9 (32)* | −18.6 (35)*,# | −24.4 (33)*,# | 1.6 (33) |
| At 12 h | 11.8 (30) | −0.8 (35) | −10.7 (34)*,# | −15.6 (32)*,# | −20.1 (33)*,# | 3.2 (33) |
| PI | ||||||
| At 8 h | 70 (30) | 63 (30) | 50 (33) | 43 (34) | 36 (32) | 64 (31) |
| At 12 h | 70 (29) | 61 (32) | 48 (34) | 46 (32) | 40 (33) | 65 (31) |
| TOTPAR | ||||||
| 0–8 h | 15 (9) | 16 (8) | 21 (10)*,# | 21 (10)*,# | 23 (10)*,# | 17 (9) |
| 0–12 h | 22 (13) | 23 (13) | 32 (16)*,# | 31 (15)*,# | 34 (15)*,# | 25 (14) |
| PAR | ||||||
| At 8 h | 1.9 (1.3) | 1.8 (1.2) | 2.6 (1.4)* | 2.6 (1.5)* | 3.0 (1.5)*,# | 2.1 (1.3) |
| At 12 h | 1.8 (1.2) | 2.0 (1.3) | 2.6 (1.5)*,# | 2.4 (1.4)* | 2.9 (1.5)*,# | 2.1 (1.3) |
Data shown are mean (standard deviation)
ANOVA analysis of variance, CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, LOCF last observation carried forward, PAR pain relief, PI pain intensity, PID pain intensity difference, PP per-protocol, SPID sum of pain intensity difference, TOTPAR total pain relief
*p < 0.05, significantly better vs. placebo
#p < 0.05, significantly better vs. tramadol (p values from ANOVA with treatment and centre as factors)
Fig. 3Pain intensity difference from baseline, mean over time by treatment group (LOCF; PP analysis set). CTC doses ≥ 100 mg were more efficacious than placebo (p < 0.05) with respect to PID from 1 h after study drug administration, regardless of the time interval examined. CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, LOCF last observation carried forward, PI pain intensity, PID pain intensity difference, PP per-protocol
Summary of additional efficacy endpoints (PP analysis set)
| Efficacy endpoint | Placebo ( | CTC | Tramadol 100 mg ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 mg ( | 100 mg ( | 150 mg ( | 200 mg ( | |||
| Responder rate at 8 h, | ||||||
| 30% reductiona or PI < 40 mm | 6 (12.8) | 10 (22.2) | 17 (36.2)* | 28 (51.9)*,# | 26 (56.5)*,# | 13 (26.5) |
| 50% reductiona or PI < 40 mm | 6 (12.8) | 9 (20.0) | 17 (36.2)* | 26 (48.1)*,# | 26 (56.5)*,# | 12 (24.5) |
| 30% reductiona | 6 (12.8) | 9 (20.0) | 17 (36.2)* | 28 (51.9)*,# | 25 (54.3)*,# | 13 (26.5) |
| 50% reductiona | 6 (12.8) | 7 (15.6) | 15 (31.9)* | 23 (42.6)*,# | 24 (52.2)*,# | 9 (18.4) |
| PI < 40 mm | 6 (12.8) | 9 (20.0) | 17 (36.2)* | 26 (48.1)*,# | 26 (56.5)*,# | 12 (24.5) |
| Responder rate at 12 h, | ||||||
| 30% reductiona or PI < 40 mm | 6 (12.8) | 11 (24.4) | 18 (38.3)* | 26 (48.1)*,# | 22 (47.8)*,# | 11 (22.4) |
| 50% reductiona or PI < 40 mm | 6 (12.8) | 11 (24.4) | 17 (36.2)* | 24 (44.4)*,# | 22 (47.8)*,# | 10 (20.4) |
| 30% reductiona | 6 (12.8) | 10 (22.2) | 18 (38.3)* | 25 (46.3)*,# | 21 (45.7)*,# | 11 (22.4) |
| 50% reductiona | 6 (12.8) | 10 (22.2) | 16 (34.0)* | 20 (37.0)*,# | 20 (43.5)*,# | 9 (18.4) |
| PI < 40 mm | 6 (12.8) | 11 (24.4) | 17 (36.2)* | 24 (44.4)*,# | 22 (47.8)*,# | 10 (20.4) |
| Median time to response (h) | ||||||
| 30% reductiona or PI < 40 mm | 2.75 | 1.75 | 1.75 | 1.75 | 1.25 | 3.25 |
| 50% reductiona or PI < 40 mm | 3.00 | 2.75 | 2.00 | 2.75 | 1.75 | 3.75 |
| 30% reductiona | 2.50 | 1.75 | 1.75 | 1.50 | 1.25 | 3.00 |
| 50% reductiona | 2.50 | 2.00 | 1.75 | 1.75 | 1.25 | 3.00 |
| PI < 40 mm | 2.50 | 2.00 | 1.75 | 1.75 | 1.25 | 3.00 |
| Patients requiring rescue medication, | ||||||
| 0–8 h | 38 (80.9) | 33 (73.3) | 29 (61.7)* | 27 (50.0)*,# | 18 (39.1)*,# | 36 (73.5) |
| 0–12 h | 38 (80.9) | 34 (75.6) | 31 (66.0) | 33 (61.1)* | 24 (52.2)*,# | 37 (75.5) |
| Time to rescue medication intake (h) | ||||||
| Median | 1.87 | 2.67 | 5.00* | 7.56*,# | 10.49*,# | 2.07 |
| Overall assessment of study medication, | ||||||
| Excellent | 2 (4.3) | 2 (4.5) | 7 (14.9) | 5 (9.4) | 5 (11.1) | 1 (2.1) |
| Very good | 2 (4.3) | 9 (20.5) | 8 (17.0) | 14 (26.4) | 15 (33.3) | 6 (12.5) |
| Good | 7 (15.2) | 3 (6.8) | 9 (19.1) | 10 (18.9) | 4 (8.9) | 9 (18.8) |
| Fair | 1 (2.2) | 5 (11.4) | 3 (6.4) | 4 (7.5) | 5 (11.1) | 4 (8.3) |
| Poor | 34 (73.9) | 25 (56.8) | 20 (42.6) | 20 (37.7) | 16 (35.6) | 28 (58.3) |
| Missing | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| | n/a | 0.20 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 | 0.38 |
| | 0.38 | 0.60 | 0.03 | <0.01 | <0.01 | n/a |
CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, PI pain intensity, PP per-protocol
*p < 0.05, significantly better vs. placebo
#p < 0.05, significantly better vs. tramadol (p values from Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel test stratified by centre [responder rate; patients requiring rescue medication; overall assessment] or from log-rank test [time to rescue medication])
aWith respect to baseline
Fig. 4Post hoc analysis of SPID (mean + SEM) up to 8 h post-dose in patients with a moderate or b severe pain at baseline (LOCF; PP analysis set). *p < 0.05, significantly better vs. placebo. #p < 0.05, significantly better vs. tramadol (p values from ANOVA with treatment and centre as factors). ANOVA analysis of variance, CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, LOCF last observation carried forward, PP per-protocol, SEM standard error of mean, SPID sum of pain intensity difference
Fig. 5Percentage of patients with at least one treatment-emergent adverse event (safety analysis set). CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib
Summary of adverse events (safety analysis set)
| Placebo ( | CTC | Tramadol 100 mg ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 mg ( | 100 mg ( | 150 mg ( | 200 mg ( | |||
| Reported AEs | 5/6 | 7/9 | 7/7 | 12/13 | 18/27 | 18/28 |
| TEAEs | 5/6 | 7/7 | 6/6 | 9/10 | 17/25 | 17/26 |
| Drug-related TEAEs | 1/1 | 1/1 | 3/3 | 2/2 | 8/11 | 8/11 |
| SAEs | 0/0 | 1/1 | 0/0 | 1/2 | 1/1 | 1/1 |
| Drug-related SAEs | 0/0 | 0/0 | 0/0 | 0/0 | 1/1 | 1/1 |
| TEAEs occurring in ≥ 2 patients | ||||||
| Vomiting | 0 | 0 | 2/2 | 4/4 | 12/12 | 11/12 |
| Nausea | 0 | 1/1 | 2/2 | 0 | 7/7 | 6/6 |
| Dizziness | 1/1 | 0 | 1/1 | 0 | 4/4 | 2/2 |
| Headache | 0 | 1/1 | 0 | 0 | 2/2 | 0 |
| Abdominal pain | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2/2 |
| Diarrhoea | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1/1 | 1/1 |
| Hypotension | 0 | 1/1 | 0 | 1/1 | 0 | 0 |
Data shown are number of patients/number of events
AE adverse event, CTC co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib, SAE serious adverse event, TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event
| This is the first time that efficacy and safety results of a new medical entity, a co-crystal containing well-known active moieties and therapeutic entities (tramadol and celecoxib), have been presented to the scientific community. |
| Findings from this study support the concept that the unique molecular structure of two active pharmaceutical ingredients’ co-crystals can confer altered physicochemical properties to the component drugs, which can ultimately translate into clinical benefits. |
| The co-crystal mechanism conferred by co-crystal of tramadol–celecoxib also translates into synergy, through which efficacy is achieved with low amounts of each active moiety, while also resulting in improved safety and tolerability, with an overall enhanced benefit-to-risk ratio. |