• Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    A Phase Ib, Dose-Finding Study of Multiple Doses of Remimazolam (CNS 7056) in Volunteers Undergoing Colonoscopy.

    • Mark T Worthington, Laurie J Antonik, D Ronald Goldwater, James P Lees, Karin Wilhelm-Ogunbiyi, Keith M Borkett, and Mack C Mitchell.
    • From the *Division of Digestive Diseases and †Department of Anesthesiology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, and ‡Early Phase Clinical Unit, PAREXEL, Baltimore, Maryland; §Clinical Development, PAION UK Ltd, Cambridge, United Kingdom; and ‖Clinical Development, PAION Deutschland, GmbH, Aachen, Germany.
    • Anesth. Analg.. 2013 Nov 1;117(5):1093-100.

    BackgroundWe performed the first multiple dose study of remimazolam designed to assess both the feasibility of maintaining suitable sedation during colonoscopy and reversing the sedative effects of remimazolam with flumazenil.MethodsHealthy volunteers received fentanyl followed by remimazolam for sedation during colonoscopy. Three dose groups of 15 volunteers each received remimazolam in increasing initial doses, plus top-up doses to maintain sedation for a 30-minute period. In a separate double-blind crossover part of the trial, 6 volunteers were sedated with a single high dose of remimazolam, followed by flumazenil or placebo to reverse the sedation.ResultsSuccessful sedation that was adequate for colonoscopy was achieved in >70% of subjects. After the procedure, subjects rapidly recovered to fully alert, with a median of <10 minutes overall. Failures were due to the inability to sedate or adverse events, with 1 subject failing due to hypotension (arterial blood pressure 80/40) and low SpO2 (<90%). There were no serious adverse events reported, and no events that were unexpected with the combination of a benzodiazepine and fentanyl. The study also showed that sedation was rapidly reversible (1.0 minutes flumazenil vs 10.5 minutes placebo) without resedation.ConclusionsRemimazolam has the attributes of a sedative drug, with success rates comparable with recent studies of other drugs. Remimazolam provided adequate sedation in 33 of 44 subjects undergoing colonoscopy, and its sedative effects were easily reversed with flumazenil.

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