Cargando…

Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy

OBJECTIVE: A Phase 3 open‐label safety study (NCT02721069) evaluated long‐term safety of diazepam nasal spray (Valtoco) in patients with epilepsy and frequent seizure clusters. METHODS: Patients were 6–65 years old with diagnosed epilepsy and seizure clusters despite stable antiseizure medications....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wheless, James W., Miller, Ian, Hogan, R. Edward, Dlugos, Dennis, Biton, Victor, Cascino, Gregory D., Sperling, Michael R., Liow, Kore, Vazquez, Blanca, Segal, Eric B., Tarquinio, Daniel, Mauney, Weldon, Desai, Jay, Rabinowicz, Adrian L., Carrazana, Enrique
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9290500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34418086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17041
_version_ 1784748915892944896
author Wheless, James W.
Miller, Ian
Hogan, R. Edward
Dlugos, Dennis
Biton, Victor
Cascino, Gregory D.
Sperling, Michael R.
Liow, Kore
Vazquez, Blanca
Segal, Eric B.
Tarquinio, Daniel
Mauney, Weldon
Desai, Jay
Rabinowicz, Adrian L.
Carrazana, Enrique
author_facet Wheless, James W.
Miller, Ian
Hogan, R. Edward
Dlugos, Dennis
Biton, Victor
Cascino, Gregory D.
Sperling, Michael R.
Liow, Kore
Vazquez, Blanca
Segal, Eric B.
Tarquinio, Daniel
Mauney, Weldon
Desai, Jay
Rabinowicz, Adrian L.
Carrazana, Enrique
author_sort Wheless, James W.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: A Phase 3 open‐label safety study (NCT02721069) evaluated long‐term safety of diazepam nasal spray (Valtoco) in patients with epilepsy and frequent seizure clusters. METHODS: Patients were 6–65 years old with diagnosed epilepsy and seizure clusters despite stable antiseizure medications. The treatment period was 12 months, with study visits at Day 30 and every 60 days thereafter, after which patients could elect to continue. Doses were based on age and weight. Seizure and treatment information was recorded in diaries. Treatment‐emergent adverse events (TEAEs), nasal irritation, and olfactory changes were recorded. RESULTS: Of 163 patients in the safety population, 117 (71.8%) completed the study. Duration of exposure was ≥12 months for 81.6% of patients. There was one death (sudden unexpected death in epilepsy) and one withdrawal owing to a TEAE (major depression), both considered unlikely to be related to treatment. Diazepam nasal spray was administered 4390 times for 3853 seizure clusters, with 485 clusters treated with a second dose within 24 h; 53.4% of patients had monthly average usage of one to two doses, 41.7% two to five doses, and 4.9% more than five doses. No serious TEAEs were considered to be treatment related. TEAEs possibly or probably related to treatment (n = 30) were most commonly nasal discomfort (6.1%); headache (2.5%); and dysgeusia, epistaxis, and somnolence (1.8% each). Only 13 patients (7.9%) showed nasal irritation, and there were no relevant olfactory changes. The safety profile of diazepam nasal spray was generally similar across subgroups based on age, monthly usage, concomitant benzodiazepine therapy, or seasonal allergy/rhinitis. SIGNIFICANCE: In this large open‐label safety study, the safety profile of diazepam nasal spray was consistent with the established profile of rectal diazepam, and the high retention rate supports effectiveness in this population. A second dose was used in only 12.6% of seizure clusters.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9290500
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-92905002022-07-20 Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy Wheless, James W. Miller, Ian Hogan, R. Edward Dlugos, Dennis Biton, Victor Cascino, Gregory D. Sperling, Michael R. Liow, Kore Vazquez, Blanca Segal, Eric B. Tarquinio, Daniel Mauney, Weldon Desai, Jay Rabinowicz, Adrian L. Carrazana, Enrique Epilepsia Full‐length Original Research OBJECTIVE: A Phase 3 open‐label safety study (NCT02721069) evaluated long‐term safety of diazepam nasal spray (Valtoco) in patients with epilepsy and frequent seizure clusters. METHODS: Patients were 6–65 years old with diagnosed epilepsy and seizure clusters despite stable antiseizure medications. The treatment period was 12 months, with study visits at Day 30 and every 60 days thereafter, after which patients could elect to continue. Doses were based on age and weight. Seizure and treatment information was recorded in diaries. Treatment‐emergent adverse events (TEAEs), nasal irritation, and olfactory changes were recorded. RESULTS: Of 163 patients in the safety population, 117 (71.8%) completed the study. Duration of exposure was ≥12 months for 81.6% of patients. There was one death (sudden unexpected death in epilepsy) and one withdrawal owing to a TEAE (major depression), both considered unlikely to be related to treatment. Diazepam nasal spray was administered 4390 times for 3853 seizure clusters, with 485 clusters treated with a second dose within 24 h; 53.4% of patients had monthly average usage of one to two doses, 41.7% two to five doses, and 4.9% more than five doses. No serious TEAEs were considered to be treatment related. TEAEs possibly or probably related to treatment (n = 30) were most commonly nasal discomfort (6.1%); headache (2.5%); and dysgeusia, epistaxis, and somnolence (1.8% each). Only 13 patients (7.9%) showed nasal irritation, and there were no relevant olfactory changes. The safety profile of diazepam nasal spray was generally similar across subgroups based on age, monthly usage, concomitant benzodiazepine therapy, or seasonal allergy/rhinitis. SIGNIFICANCE: In this large open‐label safety study, the safety profile of diazepam nasal spray was consistent with the established profile of rectal diazepam, and the high retention rate supports effectiveness in this population. A second dose was used in only 12.6% of seizure clusters. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-08-21 2021-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9290500/ /pubmed/34418086 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17041 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Epilepsia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://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 Full‐length Original Research
Wheless, James W.
Miller, Ian
Hogan, R. Edward
Dlugos, Dennis
Biton, Victor
Cascino, Gregory D.
Sperling, Michael R.
Liow, Kore
Vazquez, Blanca
Segal, Eric B.
Tarquinio, Daniel
Mauney, Weldon
Desai, Jay
Rabinowicz, Adrian L.
Carrazana, Enrique
Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
title Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
title_full Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
title_fullStr Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
title_full_unstemmed Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
title_short Final results from a Phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
title_sort final results from a phase 3, long‐term, open‐label, repeat‐dose safety study of diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters in patients with epilepsy
topic Full‐length Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9290500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34418086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17041
work_keys_str_mv AT whelessjamesw finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT millerian finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT hoganredward finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT dlugosdennis finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT bitonvictor finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT cascinogregoryd finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT sperlingmichaelr finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT liowkore finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT vazquezblanca finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT segalericb finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT tarquiniodaniel finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT mauneyweldon finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT desaijay finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT rabinowiczadrianl finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT carrazanaenrique finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy
AT finalresultsfromaphase3longtermopenlabelrepeatdosesafetystudyofdiazepamnasalsprayforseizureclustersinpatientswithepilepsy