| Literature DB >> 35357671 |
Abstract
Calcium, magnesium, potassium and sodium oxybates (Xywav®; hereafter referred to as lower-sodium oxybate), a new oxybate formulation with a greatly reduced sodium burden compared with previously approved sodium oxybate (Xyrem®), is approved for the treatment of cataplexy and excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) in adults and children aged ≥ 7 years with narcolepsy, and is the first drug approved for the treatment of idiopathic hypersomnia in adults in the USA. In two pivotal, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trials of randomized-withdrawal design, lower-sodium oxybate effectively improved cataplexy and EDS in adults with narcolepsy, and EDS and overall idiopathic hypersomnia symptoms in adults with idiopathic hypersomnia during open-label titration and optimization periods. At the end of the double-blind, randomized withdrawal period, participants randomized to switch to placebo experienced significant worsening in these symptoms compared with those randomized to continue lower-sodium oxybate. Furthermore, worsening in patient- and clinical-rated global scales, as well as measures of health-related quality of life were also seen with placebo versus lower-sodium oxybate. Lower-sodium oxybate is generally well tolerated, with the tolerability profile being largely consistent to that seen with sodium oxybate.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35357671 PMCID: PMC9095545 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-022-00912-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 6.497
Prescribing summary of lower-sodium oxybate (Xywav®) in sleep disorders in the USA [14]
| Oral solution containing 0.5 g of total salt concentration (0.234 g calcium oxybate, 0.096 g magnesium oxybate, 0.13 g potassium oxybate and 0.04 g sodium oxybate) per mL | |
| Dose preparation | Prepare dose(s) before bedtime; dilute with ≈ 60 mL of water in the empty pharmacy-provided containers before ingestion |
| Prepared solution must be taken within 24 h | |
| Administration | At least 2 h after eating |
| Narcolepsy: two doses, with the first taken at bedtime and the second 2.5–4 h after the first (may need to set an alarm to awaken) | |
| Idiopathic hypersomnia: take as one or two doses at bedtime; if divided into two doses, take the second dose 2.5–4 h after the first dose (may need to set an alarm to awaken) | |
| Administration instruction | Take each dose while in bed and lie down immediately thereafter as the drug may cause patients to fall asleep without feeling drowsy |
| Refer to Fig. | |
| Coadministration with sedative hypnotics or alcohol, or patients with succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency | |
| Patients with hepatic impairment | Due to ↑ exposure, ↓ dosage by half |
| Patients with renal impairment | No studies in these patients |
| Pregnancy | Insufficient data in humans; animal studies show ↑ stillbirths, ↓ offspring postnatal viability and growth |
| Breast feeding | Insufficient data but GHB excreted in human milk following oral administration |
| Children | Efficacy and safety for children with idiopathic hypersomnia and children aged < 7 years with narcolepsy not established |
| CNS depression | Patients should not engage in hazardous occupations or activities requiring complete mental alertness or motor coordination for at least 6 h after taking lower-sodium oxybate |
| Abuse and misuse | Classified as schedule III controlled substance; evaluate patients with recent history of abusing drugs carefully and monitor closely for signs of abuse/misuse (e.g. ↑ in strength or frequency of dosing, feigned cataplexy and drug-seeking behaviour) |
| Respiratory depression and sleep-disordered breathing | May impair respiratory drive, especially in patients with compromised respiratory function |
| Physicians should be aware that lower-sodium oxybate administration may ↑ central apnoea and clinically relevant oxygen desaturations events | |
| Sleep-related breathing disorders may be more prevalent in patients who are obese, men, postmenopausal women not on hormone replacement therapy and those with narcolepsy | |
| Depression and suicidality | Monitor carefully for the emergence of depressive symptoms during treatment, especially in patients with a previous history of a depressive illness and/or suicide attempts |
| Other behavioural or psychiatric adverse reactions | Monitor for the emergence/increase of behavioural or psychiatric symptoms such as confusion, anxiety, and hallucinations |
| Parasomnias | Parasomnias, including sleep walking, may occur during treatment; monitor and fully evaluate episodes of sleep walking and consider appropriate interventions |
| Divalproex sodium | Concomitant use ↑ systemic exposure of GHB; ↓ an initial dose of lower-sodium oxybate and monitor patient response and adjust dose accordingly |
| CNS depressants | Coadministration with other CNS depressants (e.g. opioid analgesics, benzodiazepines, sedating antidepressants, antipsychotics or anti-epileptic drugs, general anaesthetics, muscle relaxants and/or illicit CNS depressants) may ↑ the risk of respiratory depression, hypotension, profound sedation, syncope and death; consider dose reduction or discontinuation of ≥ 1 CNS depressants if used concomitantly |
| Consider interrupting lower-sodium oxybate treatment if short-term opioid use is required | |
GHB gamma-hydroxybutyrate, ↑ increase(s/d), ↓ decrease(s/d)
Fig. 1Recommended dosing regimens of lower-sodium oxybate for the treatment of narcolepsy and idiopathic hypersomnia, based on prescribing information in the USA [14]
Efficacy of lower-sodium oxybate for the treatment of narcolepsy and idiopathic hypersomnia in adults in phase 3 studies [19, 20]
| Comparators (no. of pts) | Change from SDP to DBRWP (BGD; 95% CIa) | Pts (%) with worseningb PGI-C score at the end of DBRWPe | Pts (%) with worseningb CGI-C score at the end of DBRWP | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No of weekly cataplexy attacksc | ESS scored | IHSS scoree | |||
| Narcolepsy [ | |||||
| PL (65) | 11.46 | 3.0 | NA | 44.6 | 60.0 |
| LXB (69) | 0.12*(–3.3; –6.0, –1.5) | 0.0*(–2.0; –4.0, –1.0) | NA | 4.3*f | 5.9*f |
| Idiopathic hypersomnia [ | |||||
| PL (59) | NA | 7.4 | 13.3 | 88 | 88 |
| LXB (56) | NA | 0.7*(–6.5; –8.0, –5.0) | 1.4 *(–12.0; –15.0, –8.0) | 21* | 21*f |
In participants with narcolepsy, the mean weekly number of cataplexy attacks was 7.2–8.9 and the mean ESS score was 12.6–13.6 at the end of SDP [14]; in participants with idiopathic hypersomnia, the mean ESS score was 5.8–6.3 and the mean IHSS score was 15.2–15.5 at the end of SDP [20]
BGD between-group difference, CGI-C Clinical Global Impression of Change, DBRWP double-blind randomized withdrawal period, ESS Epworth Sleepiness Scale, IHSS Idiopathic Hypersomnia Severity Scale, LXB lower-sodium oxybate, NA not applicable, PGI-C Patient Global Impression of Change, PL placebo, pts participants, SDP stable-dose period
*p < 0.0001 vs PL
aEstimated median difference [20] or location shift [19] between the treatment groups, and asymptotic 95% CI using the Hodges-Lehmann estimator were reported, except in change in ESS score in participants with idiopathic hypersomnia where least-square mean difference was reported
bIncludes ‘much’ or ‘very much’ worse for participants with narcolepsy [19] and ‘minimal’, ‘much’ or ‘very much’ worse for participants with idiopathic hypersomnia[20]
cPrimary endpoint for participants with narcolepsy [19]
dPrimary endpoint for participants with idiopathic hypersomnia [20] and key secondary endpoint for participants with narcolepsy [19]
eKey secondary endpoint for participants with idiopathic hypersomnia [20]
fNominal p < 0.0001
| A novel oxybate formulation with same active moiety and 92% less sodium content than sodium oxybate. |
| First drug approved for the treatment of idiopathic hypersomnia in adults. |
| Effectively improves narcolepsy- and idiopathic hypersomnia-related symptoms, and health-related quality of life outcomes. |
| Generally well tolerated. |