The purpose of this study is to gain initial safety and efficacy data on the experimental agent REN-1654 in patients with pain that radiates down the leg(s), and is typical of sciatica (lumbosacral radiculopathy). These patients will usually have a herniated disc that is causing compression on the nerves coming out of the spinal column.
This is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to determine the efficacy and tolerability of REN-1654 in subjects with sciatica. After screening and baseline clinical assessments, subjects will be randomly assigned to receive REN 1654 100 mg or matching placebo, once daily for 3 weeks. Leg pain, back pain and other efficacy measures will be assessed at 1 and 3 weeks after initiation of treatment. A subset of patients will undergo analysis of blood levels of REN-1654 during the course of the study (pharmacokinetics). Subjects will discontinue treatment after 3 weeks and return after a further 3 weeks off therapy for a final clinical assessment 6 weeks after initiation of treatment. If a subject does not return for follow-up, an effort will be made by telephone to document their clinical status and whether other interventions have been made.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
ECT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
72
Alabama Clinical Therapeutics
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
Advanced Clinical Therapeutics, LLC
Leg Pain: Change in Average Daily 11-Point Categorical Pain Intensity Rating at the end of the 3-week treatment period
Initiation of the following clinical interventions and time to intervention, if elected, through the 3-week treatment period and 3-week post treatment follow-up period:
[1] Local, regional, or spinal (articular, epidural, intrathecal, or nerve root block) injections of medications for pain treatment. [2] Surgery for treatment of sciatica symptoms
Use of concomitant analgesic medications (tracked by daily log of medication usage)
Back Pain: Change in Average Daily Categorical Pain Intensity
Leg Pain: Change in Maximum (or movement-induced) Daily Categorical Pain Intensity Rating
Back Pain: Change in Maximum (or movement-induced) Daily Categorical Pain Intensity
Change in Oswestry Low Back Disability Questionnaire; Change in Straight Leg Raising test
Change in muscle weakness
Change in sensory deficit
Change in tendon reflexes
Global impression of change: subject and investigator
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