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Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies

AIMS: Two post-authorisation studies assessed the safety and persistence of patients’ use of nalmefene. METHODS: The START study (EUPAS5678) was a non-interventional, multi-country, prospective, 18-month (8 follow-up visits) cohort study including outpatients initiating nalmefene for the first time....

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Autores principales: Chick, Jonathan, Andersohn, Frank, Guillo, Sylvie, Borchert, Kathrin, Toussi, Massoud, Braun, Sebastian, Haas, Jennifer S, Kuppan, Kavitha, Lemming, Ole M, Reines, Elin Heldbo, Tubach, Florence
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8406067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34196359
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agab045
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author Chick, Jonathan
Andersohn, Frank
Guillo, Sylvie
Borchert, Kathrin
Toussi, Massoud
Braun, Sebastian
Haas, Jennifer S
Kuppan, Kavitha
Lemming, Ole M
Reines, Elin Heldbo
Tubach, Florence
author_facet Chick, Jonathan
Andersohn, Frank
Guillo, Sylvie
Borchert, Kathrin
Toussi, Massoud
Braun, Sebastian
Haas, Jennifer S
Kuppan, Kavitha
Lemming, Ole M
Reines, Elin Heldbo
Tubach, Florence
author_sort Chick, Jonathan
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Two post-authorisation studies assessed the safety and persistence of patients’ use of nalmefene. METHODS: The START study (EUPAS5678) was a non-interventional, multi-country, prospective, 18-month (8 follow-up visits) cohort study including outpatients initiating nalmefene for the first time. The multi-database retrospective cohort study (MDRC, EUPAS14083) included baseline and follow-up data from German, Swedish and UK healthcare databases. Both studies permitted ‘all comers’ without explicit exclusion criteria; predefined subgroups of interest included the elderly (≥65 years) as well as patients with significant psychiatric and/or somatic comorbidities. RESULTS: START study: Overall, the mean duration of nalmefene treatment was 10.3 ± 7.3 months (N = 1348), with 49.0% of patients treated for ≥1 year; frequent reasons for treatment discontinuation were ‘goal reached’ and ‘drug cost’. The most frequently reported adverse drug reactions (ADRs) were nausea (4.7%), dizziness (3.2%) and insomnia (2.0%). ADR rates appeared higher in the elderly subpopulation (18.6% reported ≥1 ADR vs. 12.0% in the total population) but were not higher in the other predefined subgroups. MDRC study: The database follow-up analysis followed 2892 patients over 18 months for whom the duration of nalmefene treatment was between 2 and 3 months and <5% of patients used nalmefene for ≥1 year. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the inclusion of a wider patient population (e.g. elderly patients and those with relevant co-morbidities), the safety and tolerability profile of nalmefene given in routine practice was consistent with previous clinical studies. The differing rates of persistence beyond 1 year likely reflect the different methodologies and highlight the relevance of psychosocial support at follow-up visits.
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spelling pubmed-84060672021-09-01 Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies Chick, Jonathan Andersohn, Frank Guillo, Sylvie Borchert, Kathrin Toussi, Massoud Braun, Sebastian Haas, Jennifer S Kuppan, Kavitha Lemming, Ole M Reines, Elin Heldbo Tubach, Florence Alcohol Alcohol Article AIMS: Two post-authorisation studies assessed the safety and persistence of patients’ use of nalmefene. METHODS: The START study (EUPAS5678) was a non-interventional, multi-country, prospective, 18-month (8 follow-up visits) cohort study including outpatients initiating nalmefene for the first time. The multi-database retrospective cohort study (MDRC, EUPAS14083) included baseline and follow-up data from German, Swedish and UK healthcare databases. Both studies permitted ‘all comers’ without explicit exclusion criteria; predefined subgroups of interest included the elderly (≥65 years) as well as patients with significant psychiatric and/or somatic comorbidities. RESULTS: START study: Overall, the mean duration of nalmefene treatment was 10.3 ± 7.3 months (N = 1348), with 49.0% of patients treated for ≥1 year; frequent reasons for treatment discontinuation were ‘goal reached’ and ‘drug cost’. The most frequently reported adverse drug reactions (ADRs) were nausea (4.7%), dizziness (3.2%) and insomnia (2.0%). ADR rates appeared higher in the elderly subpopulation (18.6% reported ≥1 ADR vs. 12.0% in the total population) but were not higher in the other predefined subgroups. MDRC study: The database follow-up analysis followed 2892 patients over 18 months for whom the duration of nalmefene treatment was between 2 and 3 months and <5% of patients used nalmefene for ≥1 year. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the inclusion of a wider patient population (e.g. elderly patients and those with relevant co-morbidities), the safety and tolerability profile of nalmefene given in routine practice was consistent with previous clinical studies. The differing rates of persistence beyond 1 year likely reflect the different methodologies and highlight the relevance of psychosocial support at follow-up visits. Oxford University Press 2021-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8406067/ /pubmed/34196359 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agab045 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Medical Council on Alcohol and Oxford University Press. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Chick, Jonathan
Andersohn, Frank
Guillo, Sylvie
Borchert, Kathrin
Toussi, Massoud
Braun, Sebastian
Haas, Jennifer S
Kuppan, Kavitha
Lemming, Ole M
Reines, Elin Heldbo
Tubach, Florence
Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies
title Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies
title_full Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies
title_fullStr Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies
title_full_unstemmed Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies
title_short Safety and Persistence of Nalmefene Treatment for Alcohol Dependence. Results from Two Post-authorisation Safety Studies
title_sort safety and persistence of nalmefene treatment for alcohol dependence. results from two post-authorisation safety studies
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8406067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34196359
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agab045
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