Delayed nausea is a common problem after high dose chemotherapy for bone marrow transplantation. This study wants to compare standard prophylactic anti-emetic therapy with the same treatment plus the drug aprepitant (Emend). The hypothesis is that addition of Emend will reduce nausea and vomiting.
A single centre randomized placebo-controlled phase II-study with a random assignment to experimental (EXP) or control (CTR) group. All patients with lymphoproliferative diseases ≥18 years of age, scheduled for myeloablative therapy before autologous stem cell transplantation at the Akademiska University Hospital in Uppsala, Sweden, will be included consecutively during one and a half year. A total of 90 patients (45 per treatment arm) will be accrued for this study. They will be invited by mail to participate in the study a couple of weeks before hospital entry. A random assignment to EXP or CTR will be performed by research nurses not participating in any other way in the study. Patients will be stratified for diagnosis which also means myeloablative therapy (lymphoma (BEAC) or myeloma (high-dose melphalan)), and the groups are expected to be similar in size. One box for each diagnosis (lymphoma and myeloma) will contain equal numbers of randomisation cards for the experimental and control groups, randomly mixed within each box. Cards will be picked consecutively by a research nurse not otherwise involved in the study. The EXP group will receive aprepitant (EMEND®) in combination with standard anti-emetic treatment and the CTR group will receive standard anti-emetic treatment. All treatment will be given in the hospital.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
90
Aprepitant will be added to the standard anti-emetic therapy. Emend is given orally, 125 mg the first day, then 80 mg daily during the chemotherapy course and 7 days after
Placebo will be administered instead of Emend
Uppsala University Hospital
Uppsala, Sweden
Vomiting and nausea
The proportion of patients with a complete response (no vomiting and/or only mild nausea and no use of rescue therapy) a/ during chemotherapy and b/ in the delayed phase (up to 7 days after end of chemotherapy).
Time frame: 7 days
Safety and tolerability of the aprepitant regimen for CINV
Possible side effects will be recorded, and all AE:s reported during 3 weeks after the chemotherapy.
Time frame: 3 weeks
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