The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of subcutaneous (injection beneath the skin) MOA-728 versus placebo in adult Asian subjects with opioid-induced constipation associated with advanced illness (ie, a terminal illness such as incurable cancer or other end-stage disease) or chronic nonmalignant pain.
Subjects received subcutaneous methylnaltrexone (also referred to as MOA-728 or MNTX) or placebo every other day beginning on Day 1 up to a maximum of 7 doses during the 2-week double-blind period. Inclusion criteria for this study included subjects with advanced illness or subjects with chronic nonmalignant pain. The actual study population included only subjects with cancer-related advanced illness. All subjects who completed the double-blind treatment phase of this study could elect to receive methylnaltrexone during a 12-week open-label extension study, provided eligibility criteria were met. Subjects who did not continue in the open-label extension study had a follow-up visit 2 weeks after their last dose of test article.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
50
Subjects received 0.6 mL (12 mg) every other day if weight ≥ 62kg; 0.4 mL (8 mg) every other day if weight between 38 and \< 62 kg; or 0.0075 mL/kg (0.15 mg/kg) every other day if weight between 27 and \<38 kg. Study duration: 2 weeks double-blind period (MNTX treatments) followed by 12 weeks open-label extension period (MNTX treatments).
Subjects received matching placebo injections. Study duration: 2 weeks double-blind period (placebo treatments) followed by 12 weeks open-label extension period (MNTX treatments).
Unnamed facility
Koyang-shi, Kyounggi-do, South Korea
Unnamed facility
Seoul, South Korea
Unnamed facility
Seoul, South Korea
Unnamed facility
Seoul, South Korea
Unnamed facility
Tainan, Taiwan
The Proportion of Subjects Having a Rescue-free Bowel Movement (RFBM) Within 4 Hours After the First Injection.
There were 2 co-primary endpoints for this study. This measurement is the first of the 2 co-primary endpoints. This endpoint measures the percentage of patients who had an RFBM within 4 hours after the first dose of test article during the double-blind period; data are expressed as percentages of patients for the MNTX and placebo groups. To qualify as rescue free, the bowel movement could not occur within 6 hours after a rectal intervention (ie, rectal suppository, enema, manual disimpaction). Note that efficacy results (primary and secondary outcomes) are presented for the double-blind period only. Therefore, no efficacy results are presented for the open-label period.
Time frame: Up to 4 hours after the first injection
The Proportion of Subjects Having a Rescue-free Bowel Movement (RFBM) Within 4 Hours After Each Dose During Double-blind Period.
This measurement is the second of the 2 co-primary endpoints. This endpoint measures the percentage of patients who had an RFBM within 4 hours after each dose of test article during the double-blind period; data are expressed as percentages of patients by dose (first, second, third, fourth, etc.) for the MNTX and placebo groups. The definition of RFBM is described above (see first co-primary endpoint).
Time frame: Within 4 Hours After Each Dose During the 2 weeks Double-Blind Period
Percentage of Injections Resulting in RFBM Within 4 Hours After Test Article Administration.
This endpoint measures the percentage of injections resulting in RFBMs within 4 hours after test article administration during the double-blind period. The percentage of injections resulting in RFBMs is calculated for each patient and then data are expressed as the mean (± standard deviation) percentage for the MNTX and placebo groups. The definition of RFBM is described above (see first co-primary endpoint).
Time frame: Within 4 Hours After Each Dose During the 2 weeks Double-Blind Period
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
Unnamed facility
Taipei TOC, Taiwan