1. Efficacy and tolerability of a hydrocodone extended-release tablet formulated with abuse-deterrence technology for the treatment of moderate-to-severe chronic pain in patients with osteoarthritis or low back pain
- Author
-
Richard Malamut, Charles Laudadio, Arvind Narayana, Ronghua Yang, and Martin E. Hale
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,opioid loss ,Analgesic ,Placebo ,opioid analgesics ,aberrant behaviors ,medicine ,Journal of Pain Research ,Adverse effect ,Original Research ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,clinical trial ,medicine.disease ,Low back pain ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Opioid ,Tolerability ,Hydrocodone ,Anesthesia ,opioid diversion ,abuse deterrent ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Martin E Hale,1 Charles Laudadio,2 Ronghua Yang,2 Arvind Narayana,2 Richard Malamut2 1Gold Coast Research, LLC, Plantation, FL, 2Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R & D, Inc., Frazer, PA, USA Abstract: This double-blind, placebo-controlled study evaluated the efficacy and safety of hydrocodone extended release (ER) developed with abuse-deterrence technology to provide sustained pain relief and limit effects of alcohol and tablet manipulation on drug release. Eligible patients with chronic moderate-to-severe low back or osteoarthritis pain were titrated to an analgesic dose of hydrocodone ER (15–90 mg) and randomized to placebo or hydrocodone ER every 12 hours. The primary efficacy measure was change from baseline to week 12 in weekly average pain intensity (API; 0=no pain, 10=worst pain imaginable). Secondary measures included percentage of patients with >33% and >50% increases from baseline in weekly API, change from baseline in weekly worst pain intensity, supplemental opioid usage, aberrant drug-use behaviors, and adverse events. Overall, 294 patients were randomized and received ≥1 dose of placebo (n=148) or hydrocodone ER (n=146). Weekly API did not differ significantly between hydrocodone ER and placebo at week 12 (P=0.134); although, in post hoc analyses, the change in weekly API was significantly lower with hydrocodone ER when excluding the lowest dose (15 mg; least squares mean, –0.20 vs 0.40; P=0.032). Significantly more patients had .33% and .50% increase in weekly API with placebo (P
- Published
- 2015