| Literature DB >> 32453139 |
John D Markman1, Robert B Bolash2, Timothy E McAlindon3, Alan J Kivitz4, Manuel Pombo-Suarez5, Seiji Ohtori6, Frank W Roemer7,8, David J Li9, Lars Viktrup10, Candace Bramson11, Christine R West11, Kenneth M Verburg11.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: This randomized, double-blind, phase 3 study (56-week treatment; 24-week follow-up) assessed tanezumab in patients with chronic low back pain and history of inadequate response to standard-of-care analgesics (NCT02528253). Patients received placebo, subcutaneous tanezumab (5 or 10 mg every 8 weeks), or oral tramadol prolonged-release (100-300 mg/day). Primary endpoint was change in low back pain intensity (LBPI) at week 16 for tanezumab vs placebo. Key secondary endpoints were proportion of patients with ≥50% decrease in LBPI at week 16, change in Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire at week 16, and change in LBPI at week 2 for tanezumab vs placebo. Adverse events and joint safety were assessed through weeks 56 and 80, respectively. Tanezumab 10 mg met the primary endpoint by significantly improving LBPI at week 16 vs placebo; least squares (LS) mean (95% CI) difference = -0.40 (-0.76 to -0.04; P = 0.0281). Tanezumab 10 mg significantly improved all key secondary endpoints. Tanezumab 5 mg did not meet the primary endpoint (LS mean [95% CI] treatment difference vs placebo = -0.30 [-0.66 to 0.07; P = 0.1117]), preventing formal testing of key secondary endpoints for this dose. The proportion of patients with ≥50% improvement in LBPI at week 16 was 37.4% in the placebo group, 43.3% in the tanezumab 5 mg group (Odds ratio [95% CI] vs placebo = 1.28 [0.97 to 1.70; P = 0.0846]), and 46.3% in the tanezumab 10 mg group (Odds ratio [95% CI] vs placebo = 1.45 [1.09 to 1.91; P = 0.0101]). Prespecified joint safety events were more frequent with tanezumab 10 mg (2.6%) than tanezumab 5 mg (1.0%), tramadol (0.2%), or placebo (0%). Seven patients, all in the tanezumab 10 mg group (1.4%), underwent total joint replacement. In conclusion, tanezumab 10 mg significantly improved pain and function vs placebo in patients with difficult-to-treat chronic low back pain. Tanezumab was associated with a low rate of joint safety events, some requiring joint replacement.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32453139 PMCID: PMC7431140 DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain ISSN: 0304-3959 Impact factor: 7.926
Figure 1.Study design. Subcutaneous (SC) treatment was administered every 8 weeks and oral treatment was administered daily. At week 16, patients in the placebo arm were transitioned in a blinded 1:1 ratio to tanezumab 5 or 10 mg. Oral treatment was initiated at 100 mg/day and could be adjusted in 100 mg increments at weeks 1, 2, 3, and 4 to a maximum of 300 mg/day. The dose of oral medication remained stable from weeks 5 through 56 (titration of oral medication was allowed in Europe after week 16). Scheduled in-clinic visits occurred at baseline, and weeks 2, 4, 8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48, 56, 64, and 80. Scheduled phone contact with the subject occurred at weeks 1, 3, 12, 20, 28, 36, 44, 52, 60, 68, 72, and 76. *Before receiving treatment at week 16, patients must have had a ≥30% reduction from baseline in average low back pain intensity (LBPI) score at week 16 and a ≥15% reduction from baseline in mean weekly LBPI score at any week from weeks 1 through 15 to continue the study. †Before receiving treatment at week 32, patients must have had a ≥30% reduction from baseline in LBPI score to continue the study. Numbers based on the safety population.
Figure 2.Patient disposition. Efficacy analyses included all patients who received ≥1 dose of SC study medication grouped according to their assigned treatment (intention-to-treat). Safety analyses included all patients who received ≥1 dose of SC study medication grouped according to treatment received. Three patients randomized to tramadol received SC placebo but did not receive oral tramadol treatment. These patients, therefore, were assigned to the “placebo to SC tanezumab 5 mg” group for the safety population. Thus, in the “placebo to SC tanezumab 5 mg” group, there were 3 more patients in the safety population (205) than were randomized (202), leading to >100% for the safety population (all % are based on N patients randomized). *Other screened but not randomized indicates patients who were screened but not randomized for a reason not related to a specific eligibility criterion. †At week 16, patients receiving placebo were switched in a blinded 1:1 manner to 5 mg or 10 mg subcutaneous (SC) tanezumab. Patients in the placebo to SC tanezumab 5 mg and placebo to SC tanezumab 10 mg were analyzed as a single placebo group up to week 16. ‡Percentages based on the number of patients randomized. §Percentages based on the safety population. Before receiving treatment at week 16, patients must have had a ≥30% reduction in average low back pain intensity (LBPI) score at week 16 and a ≥15% reduction in mean weekly LBPI score at any week from weeks 1 through 15 to continue the study. ‖Before receiving treatment at week 32, patients must have had a ≥30% reduction in LBPI score to continue the study. If a patient withdrew due to efficacy reasons other than the specific criteria at weeks 16 and 32, the reason was classified as “insufficient clinical response.
Subject demographics and baseline characteristics.
Figure 3.Change in LBPI (A) and RMDQ (B) scores from baseline to week 56. Change in low back pain intensity (LBPI) score at week 16 (tanezumab vs placebo) was the primary efficacy endpoint. Change in LBPI score at week 2 (tanezumab vs placebo) was a key secondary endpoint. Change in Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ) score at week 16 (tanezumab vs placebo) was a key secondary endpoint. Comparisons of tanezumab to placebo at other time points, and comparisons of tramadol to other treatment groups at any time point, were secondary endpoints. The primary and key secondary endpoint analyses were adjusted for multiple comparisons; other secondary analyses were not adjusted for multiplicity. See text for details. LS, least squares; SE, standard error.
Summary of treatment-emergent adverse events (all causalities) and joint safety.