| Literature DB >> 34351590 |
Gregory B Hammer1, Ashish K Khanna2,3, Cathy Michalsky4, Linda Wase4, Mark A Demitrack4, Roderick Little5, Michael J Fossler4, Sabry Ayad6,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In the management of postoperative acute moderate-to-severe pain, opioids remain an important component. However, conventional opioids have a narrow therapeutic index and are associated with dose-limiting opioid-related adverse events (ORAEs) that can result in worse patient outcomes. Oliceridine, a new intravenous µ-opioid receptor agonist, is shown in nonclinical studies to be biased for G protein signaling (achieving analgesia) with limited recruitment of β-arrestin (associated with ORAEs). In two phase 3 randomized controlled studies of patients with moderate-to-severe acute pain following hard or soft tissue surgery, in which analgesia was measured using Sum of Pain Intensity Differences (SPID) from baseline over 48 and 24 h (SPID-48 and -24 respectively, oliceridine at demand doses of 0.1, 0.35, or 0.5 mg was highly effective compared to placebo, with a favorable safety profile compared to morphine. This exploratory analysis was conducted to determine whether the safety benefits seen with oliceridine persisted when adjusted for equal levels of analgesia compared to morphine.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse events; Logistic regression; Oliceridine; Opioid analgesic
Year: 2021 PMID: 34351590 PMCID: PMC8586048 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-021-00299-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
Incidence of spontaneously reported adverse events, coded using the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities version 19.0, used in the composite safety endpoint
| Orthopedic (hard-tissue) surgery—bunionectomy (APOLLO-1) [ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adverse drug reaction, | Oliceridine demand dose regimen | Morphine 1 mg ( | ||
| 0.1 mg (n = 76) | 0.35 mg ( | 0.5 mg ( | ||
| Nausea | 27 (35.5) | 44 (55.7) | 50 (63.3) | 49 (64.5) |
| Vomiting | 13 (17.1) | 31 (39.2) | 32 (40.5) | 38 (50.0) |
| Sedation | 6 (7.9) | 19 (24.1) | 12 (15.2) | 12 (15.8) |
| Dizziness | 21 (27.6) | 25 (31.6) | 28 (35.4) | 26 (34.2) |
| Pruritus | 2 (2.6) | 13 (16.5) | 5 (6.3) | 24 (31.6) |
| Hypoxia | 0 | 4 (5.1) | 7 (8.9) | 7 (9.2) |
Table is adapted from [16, 17]
Adverse events were spontaneously reported with onset at the time of or following the initiation of the loading dose with study medication until 7 days after the last dose of study medication. The placebo treatment arm is not shown in the table as patients receiving placebo were excluded from the analysis
Final logistic regression model for individual studies and pooled data
| Effect | Odds ratio estimate | 95% Confidence interval (lower, upper) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Orthopedic (hard tissue) surgery—bunionectomy study | |||
| Treatment (oliceridine vs. morphine)a | 0.499 | 0.255, 0.976 | 0.0422 |
| Plastic (soft tissue) surgery—abdominoplasty study | |||
| Treatment (oliceridine vs. morphine)b | 0.542 | 0.250, 1.175 | 0.1209 |
| Baseline pain scoreb | 1.279 | 1.037, 1.576 | 0.0213 |
| Analysis from the pooled studies | |||
| Treatment (oliceridine vs. morphine)c | 0.507 | 0.304, 0.844 | 0.009 |
aThe final model included treatment, baseline pain score, and Sum of Pain Intensity Differences (SPID) from baseline to 48 h (SPID-48) as main effects, and the baseline pain score and SPID-48 interaction
bThe final model included treatment and baseline pain score as main effects
cThe final model included treatment, study identifier, baseline pain score, and SPID-48 or SPID from baseline to 24 h (SPID-24), baseline pain score and study identifier interaction, and baseline pain score and SPID-48/-24 interaction
Fig. 1Odds ratio and 95% confidence interval (CI) for treatment effect (oliceridine vs. morphine) on the composite endpoint. The composite safety endpoint was defined as the presence of at least one treatment-emergent adverse event of nausea, vomiting, sedation, dizziness, pruritus, or hypoxia, as coded by the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities version 19.0. In the model, oliceridine demand dose regimens of 0.1, 0.35, and 0.5 mg were pooled and set as “zero,” and the morphine treatment regimen was set to “one.” The duration was 48 h for the bunionectomy study and 24 h for the abdominoplasty study. Analgesia as measured by the Sum of Pain Intensity Difference (SPID) is held constant across treatment groups; SPID-48 (SPID from baseline to 48 h) and SPID-24 (SPID from baseline to 24 h) were used for the bunionectomy and abdominoplasty studies, respectively
Fig. 2Odds ratio and 95% CI for treatment effect (oliceridine vs. morphine) onindividual adverse events. In the model, oliceridine demand dose regimens of 0.1, 0.35, and 0.5 mg were pooled and set as “zero,” and morphine treatment regimen was set to “one.” The duration was 48 h for the bunionectomy study and 24 h for the abdominoplasty study. Analgesia as measured by SPID was held constant across treatment groups; SPID-48 and SPID-24 were used for the bunionectomy and abdominoplasty studies, respectively
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| Oliceridine, a new intravenous opioid, is shown in nonclinical studies to be a G protein-biased agonist at the μ-opioid receptor. This preferential activity may result in potent analgesia with reduced recruitment of β-arrestin, a signaling pathway associated with opioid-related adverse events (ORAEs). |
| In two randomized, placebo- and active-controlled phase 3 studies, we have previously reported that oliceridine administered via patient-controlled analgesia provided effective analgesia with a favorable safety profile. |
| An understanding of the relationship between efficacy and safety is important to assess the benefit–risk profile of a new compound. Randomized clinical trials are typically designed to evaluate efficacy and the statistical analytical methods used may be underpowered to identify any differences on the adverse event profile between treatments. |
| Logistic regression offers a framework that allows an estimate of the probability of an adverse reaction associated with a treatment, including the assessment of the strength of association. It is routinely used in the evaluation of post-marketing adverse effects reports to determine association of causality. |
| In this exploratory analysis, we utilized the logistic regression method to evaluate the safety of oliceridine when adjusted for equal levels of analgesia compared to morphine using data from the two pivotal randomized clinical trials. The ORAEs of nausea, vomiting, sedation, dizziness, pruritus, and hypoxia, with at least one treatment-emergent adverse event, was used as the composite safety endpoint. |
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| The analysis demonstrates that at comparable levels of analgesia, patients receiving oliceridine were less likely to experience the composite safety endpoint consisting of ORAEs compared to patients treated with morphine. |