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Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers

Two open‐label, single‐dose, randomized crossover studies were conducted in healthy Japanesemen to (1) assess dose proportionality of 5 doses (1.38, 2.75, 5.5, 8.25, and 11.0 mg) of Lafenta, a novel matrix‐type transdermal fentanyl patch with a rate‐controlling membrane; and (2) compare patch bioequ...

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Autores principales: Lorch, Ulrike, Pierscionek, Tomasz, Freier, Anne, Spencer, Christopher S., Täubel, Jörg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7984375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32748570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpdd.846
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author Lorch, Ulrike
Pierscionek, Tomasz
Freier, Anne
Spencer, Christopher S.
Täubel, Jörg
author_facet Lorch, Ulrike
Pierscionek, Tomasz
Freier, Anne
Spencer, Christopher S.
Täubel, Jörg
author_sort Lorch, Ulrike
collection PubMed
description Two open‐label, single‐dose, randomized crossover studies were conducted in healthy Japanesemen to (1) assess dose proportionality of 5 doses (1.38, 2.75, 5.5, 8.25, and 11.0 mg) of Lafenta, a novel matrix‐type transdermal fentanyl patch with a rate‐controlling membrane; and (2) compare patch bioequivalence (11.0 mg) with a commercially available reference patch (Durotep MT Patch [16.8 mg]). Pharmacokinetics, adhesion performance, residual fentanyl, and safety parameters were assessed. Increases in mean AUC(0‐t) and C(max) after application of the test patch were dose proportional. The test patch (11.0 mg) was bioequivalent to the 16.8‐mg reference patch in terms of mean AUC(0‐inf), AUC(0‐t), and C(max). Residual fentanyl levels 72 hours postapplication were lower in the test than in the reference patch. Differences in adhesion performance between the test and the reference patch did not affect delivery efficacy and reliability of the novel matrix patch. Safety findings were in line with previous experiences with fentanyl. Both studies showed low variation in fentanyl exposure and delivery via the test patch. The test patch provided equivalent fentanyl exposure at a lower dose than the reference patch formulation with lower variability and the potential to lower medicinal waste.
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spelling pubmed-79843752021-03-25 Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers Lorch, Ulrike Pierscionek, Tomasz Freier, Anne Spencer, Christopher S. Täubel, Jörg Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev Articles Two open‐label, single‐dose, randomized crossover studies were conducted in healthy Japanesemen to (1) assess dose proportionality of 5 doses (1.38, 2.75, 5.5, 8.25, and 11.0 mg) of Lafenta, a novel matrix‐type transdermal fentanyl patch with a rate‐controlling membrane; and (2) compare patch bioequivalence (11.0 mg) with a commercially available reference patch (Durotep MT Patch [16.8 mg]). Pharmacokinetics, adhesion performance, residual fentanyl, and safety parameters were assessed. Increases in mean AUC(0‐t) and C(max) after application of the test patch were dose proportional. The test patch (11.0 mg) was bioequivalent to the 16.8‐mg reference patch in terms of mean AUC(0‐inf), AUC(0‐t), and C(max). Residual fentanyl levels 72 hours postapplication were lower in the test than in the reference patch. Differences in adhesion performance between the test and the reference patch did not affect delivery efficacy and reliability of the novel matrix patch. Safety findings were in line with previous experiences with fentanyl. Both studies showed low variation in fentanyl exposure and delivery via the test patch. The test patch provided equivalent fentanyl exposure at a lower dose than the reference patch formulation with lower variability and the potential to lower medicinal waste. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-08-03 2021-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7984375/ /pubmed/32748570 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpdd.846 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Clinical Pharmacology in Drug Development published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Clinical Pharmacology This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Articles
Lorch, Ulrike
Pierscionek, Tomasz
Freier, Anne
Spencer, Christopher S.
Täubel, Jörg
Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers
title Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers
title_full Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers
title_fullStr Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers
title_full_unstemmed Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers
title_short Safety, Tolerability, and Dose Proportionality of a Novel Transdermal Fentanyl Matrix Patch and Bioequivalence With a Matrix Fentanyl Patch: Two Phase 1 Single‐Center Open‐Label, Randomized Crossover Studies in Healthy Japanese Volunteers
title_sort safety, tolerability, and dose proportionality of a novel transdermal fentanyl matrix patch and bioequivalence with a matrix fentanyl patch: two phase 1 single‐center open‐label, randomized crossover studies in healthy japanese volunteers
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7984375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32748570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpdd.846
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