Journal of clinical pharmacology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Exposure-response analyses of the effects of pregabalin in patients with fibromyalgia using daily pain scores and patient global impression of change.
Data from 4 phase 2/3 studies were pooled to characterize the exposure response of daily pregabalin (150-600 mg) in patients with fibromyalgia using self-assessed daily pain scores (PAIN) and end-of-treatment patient global impression of change (PGIC). The exposure responses of both endpoints were characterized by an Emax model using nonlinear mixed-effects modeling (NONMEM). Drug effect on PAIN relative to placebo was significant with additional maximum effect of 1.51 points on the logit scale and EC50 of 1.54 ng/mL (dose of 174 mg) and a rapid onset (half-life of 11 hours), consistent with the half-life of the drug. ⋯ Drug response in fibromyalgia was dependent on age and sex, with greater PAIN reduction in older patients, in addition to the effect of creatinine clearance, and in females. For PGIC, administration of pregabalin resulted in an increase in the proportion of patients reporting improvement with an ED50 of 228 mg. The analyses support the recommended dose of pregabalin in patients with fibromyalgia of 300 to 450 mg/d.
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Clinical Trial
Evaluation of the single- and multiple-dose pharmacokinetics of fentanyl buccal soluble film in normal healthy volunteers.
Fentanyl buccal soluble film (FBSF) is a rapidly absorbed transmucosal formulation of fentanyl for the management of breakthrough pain in opioid-tolerant patients with cancer. This open-label, 3-period, sequential dose study evaluated the dose-to-dose reproducibility of the pharmacokinetics of fentanyl following the administration of 600- or 1800-microg doses of FBSF in 12 naltrexone-blocked, healthy adult volunteers. Subjects received 3 study treatments: single doses of 600 microg of FBSF on day 1 and day 4 and three 600-microg doses administered at 1-hour intervals on day 7. ⋯ Peak plasma concentrations (mean C(max) = 1.08 and 1.01 ng/mL) and overall exposure (mean AUC(0-12) = 6.3 and 6.2 h.ng/mL; mean AUC(inf) = 9.14 and 9.60 h.ng/mL) were nearly identical after the 2 single doses (P >or= .1, all comparisons). C(max) and overall fentanyl exposure (AUC(inf)) increased approximately 3-fold with the 3-dose regimen compared with the single-dose periods. Fentanyl plasma concentrations following single doses of FBSF were reproducible, and 3 doses administered 1 hour apart produced a tripling in exposure and maximal concentration compared with a single dose.