Considering the mechanisms of action which provide efficacy in epilepsy, it is hypothesized that treatment with levetiracetam will reduce the neuronal excitability involved in neuropathic pain associated with CIAP. Thus, there is a potential for levetiracetam to bring therapeutic benefit for the subjects because of its specific mechanism of action, its safety profile and the absence of interaction with other drugs.
Based on literature and expert opinion, and despite the efforts made to better treat the spectrum of neuropathic pains, there are still unmet needs. The available treatments are not effective as monotherapy administration in the vast majority of patients and polypharmacy with several medications is often necessary. Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), mainly amitriptyline, are still a mainstay of treatment for painful peripheral neuropathy, but at the risk of some dose-limiting adverse events, which may reduce their effectiveness. TCA treatment effect is inconsistent and limited by side effects. In one clinical trial while about 50% of patients achieved significant or complete relief of pain 81% experienced side effects and in 71% the side effects were dose limiting. TCAs can produce sedation, urinary retention, and orthostatic hypotension that are of particular concern in the elderly and patients with cardiovascular disease. In the same study desipramine was associated with a slightly lower rate of side effects it offered only 40% of patients significant or complete relief of neuropathic pain. Fluoxetine was no more effective than placebo in pain relief. (Max, 1992). Due to the scarcity of controlled clinical trials and the inconclusive results of available trials, physicians vary markedly in their suggested regimens for neuropathic pain management. (Beydoun, 1999). Antiepileptic drugs are being used more frequently in non-epileptic indications such as neuropathic pain. One of the mechanisms by which neuropathic pain occurs is related to an increased excitability of central neurons. Although their precise mechanism of action in neuropathic pain remains unknown, antiepileptic drugs are believed to exert their antineuralgic activity by suppressing the neuronal hyperexcitability state that characterizes neuropathic pain. A small crossover trial of carbamazepine produced clinical benefit is a significant number of patients but with side effects of somnolence in 50%, dizziness in 40% and rash in 6% (Rull, 1969). Gabapentin showed benefit over placebo in a 165-subject randomized study of painful diabetic neuropathy pain; side effects were noted to be mild or moderate in most but 8% withdrew due to side effects (Backonja, 1998). In a placebo controlled study of lamotrigine in diabetic neuropathy there was s significant reduction in daily pain scores compared to placebo; side effects were noted in about half of the treated group but were minor. (Eisenberg, 2001). Results of treatment trials sing valproate in painful diabetic neuropathy have been variable with both positive (Kochar, 2004) and negative trials (Otto, 2004). Treatment of neuropathic pain in chronic idiopathic axonal polyneuropathy has received limited study. In a single open label study or CIDP pain tiagabine produced about 30% reduction in pain severity but almost half of the patients discontinued the trial (Novak, 2001). Levetiracetam has been tested in two animal models of neuropathic pain (Ardidd, 2001). In the streptozocin diabetic rat model, reactivity to a pressure on the paw was assessed and revealed that the ED50 for levetiracetam was comparable to the one observed in the epilepsy models. Further, hyperalgesia was dose-dependently decreased by levetiracetam. On the other hand, in the mononeuropathic sciatic nerve ligature model, hyperalgesia was not significantly diminished. Carbamazepine is effective in the sciatic nerve ligature model. Animal models of neuropathic pain are considered suggestive of activity in humans but they are not directly predictive. Based on the data from the animal studies in neuropathic pain models, levetiracetam has been tested in a limited basis in two human types of neurological pain, painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy and sural nerve stimulation in healthy volunteers. The diabetic neuropathy study was a 12-week, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel group study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of flexible dosing with LEV at 500 to 1500 mg bid. A total of 105 subjects were included in the ITT population, 52 subjects in placebo and 53 subjects in the LEV group. At baseline, the treatment groups were comparable with respect to demographic and other baseline characteristics. There were no statistically significant or clinically meaningful treatment differences observed throughout the evaluation period relative to baseline (personal communication). In the randomized, double-blind, crossover, electrical sural nerve stimulation study, pain was assessed in healthy volunteers before and 2, 4, 6, 8 and 24 hours after 1500 mg levetiracetam or placebo was orally administered. Levetiracetam significantly increased the threshold for pain detection when single electrical sural nerve stimulation was used, but had no effect on temporal pain summation after repetitive sural nerve stimulation (CDC). It has, however, been demonstrated that results from one type of neuropathic pain cannot necessarily be extrapolated to other types, as the negative results of the 1998 study of amitriptyline in HIV-related painful neuropathy demonstrates (Beydoun, 1999). A small, investigator-initiated open label trial using levetiracetam in postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) was recently completed. The study, published in Neurology, reported 6/10 patients had improvement in PHN symptomatology after a 12-week treatment with levetiracetam. All 10 patients exposed had received multiple prior treatments for PHN (Rowbotham, 2003).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
30
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Exploratory efficacy endpoint
The primary exploratory efficacy variable is the absolute change in the average weekly PSS from the baseline period to the last 7 days of the evaluation period (Last Observation Carried Forward).
The secondary exploratory efficacy endpoints and/or analysis methods are:
Reduction of at least 30% in the mean PSS over the last week of the evaluation period compared to the baseline period (30% Responder).
Reduction of at least 50% in the mean PSS over the last week of the evaluation period compared to the baseline period (50% Responder).
Percent change in the mean PSS from the baseline week to each weekly mean.
Absolute change from the baseline week to each weekly mean in the PSS.
Changes from the baseline week to each weekly mean, and to the last week of evaluation period, in the SIS.
Absolute changes from the randomization visit to each evaluation period/early discontinuation visit, in each score (Total pain score, Sensory score, Affective score, Present Pain Intensity (PPI) and VAS) of the SF-MPQ.
Subject Global Impression of Change (SGIC) at visit 6 or the last visit of the evaluation period.
Clinician's Global Impression of Change (CGIC) at visit 6 or the last visit of the evaluation period.
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