The study was conducted as a placebo-controlled, randomized, 22-week double-blind study which included a dose titration period. An additional transition period occurred for those patients who elected to enroll into the open-label extension study, APD811-007. A total of 61 patients with PAH were enrolled.
Study APD811-003 was a 22-week, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study in subjects with symptomatic WHO Group 1 PAH. The study consisted of a dose titration period of up to 9 weeks, a 13-week maintenance period, and a follow-up visit that was to occur approximately 3 weeks after the end of the maintenance period (Week 25). The transition period of 3 weeks (±1 week) was to occur for those subjects who elected to enroll into the open-label extension (OLE) Study APD811-007. Approximately 60 subjects with PAH were planned to be enrolled (61 actual). After screening, eligible subjects were randomized 2:1 to ralinepag (APD811) or to placebo. Randomization was stratified by baseline WHO/NYHA functional class (II versus III or IV). Subjects randomized to active therapy were given ralinepag at a starting dose of 0.01 mg BID. Subjects randomized to the placebo arm received matching placebo capsules to preserve the blind. Subjects were instructed to take the study drug (ralinepag or placebo) with food. Dosage was then uptitrated, as tolerated, over the course of the 9-week dose-titration period to a maximum dose of 0.3 mg BID. Although doses could be reduced based on tolerability, the final dosage reached was required to be stable during the 13-week treatment period prior to evaluation at Week 22. Subjects could receive concomitant oral disease-specific PAH therapy consisting of an ERA and/or an agent acting on the nitric oxide pathway, a PDE-5 inhibitor or a sGC stimulator, provided the dose had remained stable for at least 3 months prior to the start of screening. It was recommended that subjects continue the same dose and regimen of these medications for the duration of the study. With the exception of prostanoids, the use of other supporting therapies, which may affect PAH, was also permitted. During the study, assessments of efficacy were performed including PVR and other hemodynamic parameters as determined by RHC, the 6MWT, assessment of clinical worsening, BNP and NT-proBNP levels, WHO/NYHA functional class assessment of PAH. Safety assessments included standard evaluations of AEs, clinical laboratory values, vital signs, and ECG measurements. At the end of the maintenance period, subjects who did not choose to participate in the OLE study were to discontinue study drug (ralinepag or placebo). All subjects that chose to continue in the OLE study were to remain on study drug until the follow-up visit at Week 25. This visit served as the baseline visit for the OLE study if the subject was eligible and chose to participate.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
61
Change From Baseline in Pulmonary Vascular Resistance (PVR)
Measurements of PVR from right heart catheterization were obtained prior to Day 1 of the dose titration period and at the end of the maintenance period (Week 22), approximately 4 hours after the last dose of study drug.
Time frame: Baseline and 22 Weeks
Change From Baseline in 6-minute Walk Distance (6MWD) in Patients With PAH
The 6MWT was conducted according to the modified guidelines issued by the American Thoracic Society prior to Day 1 of the dose titration period and at the end of the maintenance period (Week 22).
Time frame: Baseline and 22 Weeks
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