| Literature DB >> 30471002 |
Abstract
Tapentadol prolonged release (tapentadol PR) [Palexia® SR in EU] is a long-acting tablet formulation of the strong central analgesic tapentadol, which acts as both a μ-opioid receptor (MOR) agonist and a noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor. Tapentadol PR is approved for chronic pain in various countries, with its EU indication (severe chronic pain manageable only with opioid analgesics) being the focus here. Well-designed trials and clinical practice data support tapentadol PR use in this setting. Short term, tapentadol PR was an effective and generally well tolerated analgesic for moderate to severe pain of varying aetiologies, including neuropathic pain. It provided analgesia at least as good as that of conventional strong opioids and appeared more favourable in terms of gastrointestinal tolerability, likely due to less potent MOR binding. Severe back pain with a neuropathic component responded well to moderate-dose tapentadol PR in some patients, while for others, an increase to the maximum recommended tapentadol PR dosage provided analgesia at least as good as that of moderate-dose tapentadol PR plus pregabalin and appeared to have some CNS tolerability benefits. Data also support the use of tapentadol PR in opioid rotation, including when conventional opioids are intolerable. Longer-term data in musculoskeletal pain conditions indicate continued benefit over up to 2 years' treatment with tapentadol PR with no evidence of tolerance. Thus, tapentadol PR is a useful option for the management of severe chronic pain.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30471002 PMCID: PMC6422986 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-018-1007-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Efficacy of tapentadol prolonged release in relieving moderate to severe chronic pain associated with knee osteoarthritis or the lower back in 15-week phase 3 trials and a pooled analysis of the studies
| Trial/analysis | Treatment (no. of intent-to-treat pts) | Least squares mean difference vs. PL [95% CI] in change from BL in average pain intensitya | Pts (%) with a reduction from BL in average pain intensity at wk 12 of maintenance of | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Over 12 wks of maintenanceb | At wk 12 of maintenancec | ≥ 30% | ≥ 50% | ||
| Serrie et al. [ | TAP PR (319) | − 0.2 [− 0.55, 0.07] | − 0.3 [− 0.61, 0.09] | 41 | 31 |
| OXY CR (331) | + 0.1 [− 0.18, 0.44] | + 0.2 [− 0.16, 0.54] | 26 | 22 | |
| PL (337) | 41††† | 27 | |||
| Afilalo et al. [ | TAP PR (344) | − 0.7 [− 1.00, −0.33] | − 0.7 [− 1.04, −0.33] | 43 | 32* |
| OXY CR (342) | − 0.3 [− 0.67, 0.00] | − 0.3 [− 0.68, 0.02] | 25 | 17 | |
| PL (337) | 36†† | 24† | |||
| Buynak et al. [ | TAP PR (315) | − 0.7 [− 1.06, −0.35]*** | − 0.8 [− 1.22, −0.47]*** | 40*** | 27* |
| OXY CR (326) | − 0.8 [− 1.16, −0.46]*** | − 0.9 [− 1.24, −0.49]*** | 30 | 23 | |
| PL (317) | 27 | 19 | |||
| Lange et al. [ | TAP PR (978) | − 0.5 [− 0.73, − 0.34]***d | − 0.6 [− 0.80, − 0.39]***d | 41**††† | 30***††† |
| OXY CR (999) | − 0.3 [− 0.52, − 0.14]*** | − 0.3 [− 0.53, − 0.12]** | 27 | 21 | |
| PL (991) | 35††† | 24 | |||
Mean pain intensity score at BL (over last 72 h) was 7.3–7.5 [18–20, 26] (graph estimate [20]) on NRS (0 = no pain; 10 = worst pain)
BL baseline, OXY CR oxycodone controlled release 20–50 mg twice daily, NRS numerical rating scale, PL placebo, pts patients, TAP PR tapentadol prolonged release 100–250 mg twice daily, wk(s) week(s)
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.005, *** p < 0.001 vs. PL
†p < 0.05, ††p < 0.005, †††p < 0.001 vs. OXY CR
aAverage intensity of pain over last 12 h rated twice daily on 11-point NRS
bPrimary endpoint in EU and other non-USA regions
cPrimary endpoint in USA
dTAP PR was noninferior to OXY CR [26], with a pre-planned additional analysis indicating TAP PR was superior to OXY CR (p = 0.037) for the mean change in average pain intensity over 12 weeks of maintenance [32]
Efficacy of tapentadol prolonged release in patients with severe chronic lower back pain with a neuropathic component in phase 3b/4 trials; see text for details of pickup and continuation arms
| Trial (comparative period; wks) | Treatment (mg) [no. of pts evaluated for primary endpoint] | Mean change from randomization [mean at randomization] to final evaluation in | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average pain intensitya (LSM BGD; 95% CI) | Intensity of pain radiating to leg | painDETECT scoreb | NPSI scoreb | ||
| Baron et al. [ | TAP PR 50–250 bid [117] | − 3.7* (− 1.0; − 1.82, − 0.18)† [7.6] | − 3.9*† [7.5] | − 10.8*† [22] | − 0.35*† [NR] |
| OXY/NAL PR 10/5–40/20 bid [112] | − 2.7* [7.6] | − 2.8* [7.6] | − 7.9* [23] | − 0.25* [NR] | |
| TAP PR pick-up arm [50] | − 3.1* [7.6] | NR [NR] | − 9.0* [22] | NR* [NR] | |
| Baron et al. [ | TAP PR 500/d [139] | − 1.6** (− 0.066; − 0.57, 0.43)c [6] | − 1.6** [NR] | − 5.8** [18] | − 16.4** [46] |
| TAP PR 300/d + PRG [149] | − 1.7** [6] | − 1.9** [NR] | − 6.1** [18] | − 16.7** [46] | |
| TAP PR 300/d continuation armd [59] | − 5.2** [7.9] | − 5.5** [7.8] | − 15.0** [23] | − 48.8** [63] | |
OXY/NAL PR maximum dosage also included OXY PR 10 mg bid. For one study [30], some mean values at randomization are estimated from graphs
bid twice daily, d day, LSM BGD least-squares mean between-group difference, NAL naloxone, NPSI Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory, NR not reported, NRS 11-point numerical rating scale (0 = no pain; 10 = worst pain imaginable), OXY oxycodone, PR prolonged release, PRG pregabalin 300 mg/d, pts patients, TAP tapentadol
*p <0.001, **p < 0.0001 vs. at randomization (or baseline in the TAP PR continuation arm)
†p ≤ 0.003 vs. OXY/NAL PR regimen
aPrimary endpoint (per-protocol pts); average pain intensity in last 3 days rated on NRS. Other endpoints used full analysis set (n = 309 [30] or 256 [29])
bpainDETECT total score (range 0–38); NPSI total score (range 0–100) [30] or overall feeling score (range 0–1) [29]. Higher scores = more severe pain
cTAP PR was noninferior to the comparator regimen. Between-group statistical comparisons were not reported for other outcomes
dValues are mean changes from baseline [mean at baseline] [54]
Analgesic efficacy of tapentadol prolonged release in managing painful diabetic neuropathy in randomized-withdrawal phase 3 trials and a post hoc pooled analysis of the studies
| Trial | Treatment [no. of intent-to-treat pts] | Mean change in average pain intensitya | Pts (%) with reduction in pain intensity from pre-titration to week 12 of maint of | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥ 30% | ≥ 50% | |||
| Schwartz et al. [ | TAP PR [196] | 0.0 (− 1.3; − 1.70, − 0.92)*** [3.7] | 54* | 38* |
| PL [193] | 1.4 [3.5] | 42 | 28 | |
| Vinik et al. [ | TAP PR [166] | 0.28 (− 0.95; − 1.42, − 0.49)*** [3.7] | 55* | 40* |
| PL [152] | 1.30 [3.5] | 45 | 29 | |
Schwartz et al. [ (pooled analysis) | TAP PR [360] | 0.08 (− 1.14; − 1.44, − 0.84)*** [3.7] | 54** | 39** |
| PL [343] | 1.28 [3.5] | 44 | 28 | |
Trials had 3 weeks of TAP PR titration then randomization to continued TAP PR or PL for 12-week maint period
LSM BGD least-squares mean between-group difference, maint maintenance, NRS numerical rating scale, PL placebo, pts patients, TAP PR tapentadol prolonged release100–250 mg twice daily
*p < 0.05, **p ≤ 0.005, ***p < 0.001 vs. PL
aPrimary endpoint. Average pain intensity over last 12 h rated twice daily on NRS (0 = no pain; 10 = worst pain imaginable)
bMean maint start values are estimated from graphs for some studies [36, 37]
Fig. 1Adverse event profile of tapentadol prolonged release (system organ class and individual); a pooled analysis of phase 3 trials of ≤ 1 years’ duration [21]. bid twice daily, GI gastrointestinal, NS nervous system, OXY CR oxycodone controlled release, PL placebo, TAP PR tapentadol prolonged release, TEAEs treatment-emergent adverse events
| Acts via μ-opioid receptor agonism and noradrenaline reuptake inhibition |
| Reduces moderate to severe chronic pain of varying aetiologies, including neuropathic pain |
| At least as effective as conventional strong opioids, but more favourable GI tolerability |
| Effective and generally well tolerated over up to 2 years’ therapy, without evidence of tolerance |