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Principal results of a randomised open label exploratory, safety and tolerability study with calmangafodipir in patients treated with a 12 h regimen of N-acetylcysteine for paracetamol overdose (POP trial)Research in context

Authors :
Emma E. Morrison
Katherine Oatey
Bernadette Gallagher
Julia Grahamslaw
Rachel O'Brien
Polly Black
Wilna Oosthuyzen
Robert J. Lee
Christopher J. Weir
Dennis Henriksen
James W. Dear
Source :
EBioMedicine, Vol 46, Iss , Pp 423-430 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Background: The POP Trial was a phase 1, open-label, rising-dose, randomised study that explored the safety and tolerability of calmangafodipir (superoxide dismutase mimetic) co-treatment with n-acetylcysteine (NAC) for paracetamol overdose. Methods: Patients were recruited at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh (8th June 2017-10th May 2018). Inclusion criterion: adults within 24 h of a paracetamol overdose that required NAC. Within each of 3 sequential cohorts, participants were randomly assigned, with concealed allocation, to NAC and a single intravenous calmangafodipir dose (n = 6) or NAC alone (n = 2). Calmangafodipir doses were 2, 5, or 10 μmol/kg. Participants, study and clinical teams were not blinded. The primary outcome was safety and tolerability. Secondary outcomes were alanine transaminase (ALT), international normalised ratio (INR), keratin-18, caspase-cleaved keratin-18 (ccK18), microRNA-122, and glutamate dehydrogenase (GLDH). (Clinicaltrials.gov:NCT03177395). Findings: All 24 participants received their allocated drug doses and were analysed. Primary endpoints: all participants experienced ≥1 adverse event (AE), most commonly gastrointestinal. Patients experiencing ≥1 serious adverse event (SAE): NAC alone, 2/6; NAC + calmangafodipir (2 μmol/kg), 4/6; NAC + calmangafodipir (5 μmol/kg), 2/6; NAC + calmangafodipir (10 μmol/kg), 3/6. No AEs or SAEs were probably or definitely calmangafodipir-related. Secondary safety outcomes demonstrated no differences between groups. With NAC alone, 2/6 had ALT > 100 U/L; with NAC + calmangafodipir, 0/18. No INR difference. Keratin-18 and ccK18 increased in the NAC alone group more than with calmangafodipir (baseline to 20 h fold change, NAC + calmangafodipir (5 μmol/kg) compared to NAC alone: 0.48 (95%CI 0.28–0.83)). microRNA-122 changes were similar to K18, GLDH was frequently undetected. Interpretation: Calmangafodipir was tolerated when combined with NAC and may reduce biomarkers of paracetamol toxicity.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Medicine (General)
R5-920

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23523964
Volume :
46
Issue :
423-430
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EBioMedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8634f94b06b647bf93d8be5200422d32
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.07.013