The objective of this study is to evaluate the effects of naloxegol (a peripheral mu-opioid receptor antagonist \[PAMORA\]) in opioid-related gastroparesis on 1) symptoms of gastroparesis; 2) gastric emptying; and 3) pain control. The endpoints will be gastroparesis symptoms (PAGI-SYM), gastric emptying (GEBT), and pain control (McGill Pain Inventory). The hypothesis to be tested is that naloxegol improves symptoms of gastroparesis in patients who are taking opioids as well as improves their gastric emptying while maintaining control of patient's pain. This study will entail an initial double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, 4-week treatment period of naloxegol vs placebo in patients with opioid-related gastroparesis followed by a 4-week open label period to demonstrate the improvement in symptoms and gastric emptying with naloxegol.
Medicines can delay gastric emptying and produce similar symptoms to gastroparesis. In particular, narcotic analgesics, can produce a gastroparesis picture, by delaying gastric emptying. The slowing effect of opioids on gastric, small bowel, and colonic motility has been well characterized. Unfortunately, many of these patients cannot stop their pain medications due to their underlying condition, such as back pain, fibromyalgia. On top of this, the narcotics can reduce the effectiveness of prokinetics agents used to treat gastroparesis, such as metoclopramide and domperidone. At this time, there is no good treatment for gastroparesis, especially for opioid-related gastroparesis. Data suggests a relationship between opioid use and decreased gastric motility. Literature suggests that peripherally acting opioid agonist may provide relief in the instance of GI dysfunction (Holzer 2007). Movantik (Naloxegol) is an opioid agonist specifically designed to work outside of the central nervous system. Movantik (Naloxegol) can alleviate the adverse effects associated in chronic pain patients on opioid treatment - reduction of the undesired peripheral effects of opioids without disrupting analgesic effects. The use of Movantik (Naloxegol) has the potential to improve gastric dysmotility while preserving pain relief of the opioid analgesic. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effects of naloxegol in opioid-related gastroparesis. This will be a randomized, double-blind study comparing Movantik 25 mg to placebo. The dose of Movantik is the dose that is currently FDA approved for opioid-induced constipation. The four-week study period is the duration of the phase 2b studies for Movantik for opioid-induced constipation in which the response rates were 60% and 35% with active treatment and placebo (Chey 2015). The investigators have included a unique aspect of this study to better balance the benefits for patients participating in this randomized double-blind study in which half the patients receive a placebo agent. All patients in the treatment group and the placebo group will be invited to participate in the 4-week open-label extension for this study. This also serves to study the duration of the potential favorable effects of Movantik (Naloxegol) in this patient population as well as offering an extended time period to assess safety and tolerability.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Patients will be given the study drug (Movantik 25 mg).They will take this daily in the morning 1 hour before breakfast for four weeks.
Patients will be given Placebo (Placebo 25 mg).They will take this daily in the morning 1 hour before breakfast for four weeks.
Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Gastric Emptying (GE t-1/2)
Improvement in gastric emptying (GE t-1/2) compared to Placebo
Time frame: 4 week
Daily Symptom Improvement using the GCSI-DD (Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index-Daily Diary)
Improvements of gastroparesis symptoms using the GCSI-DD (Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index-Daily Diary)
Time frame: 4 weeks
Symptom Improvement using PAGI-SYM
Improvements of gastroparesis symptoms using PAGI-SYM
Time frame: 4 weeks
Pain Management using the McGill Pain Inventory
Changes in pain control using the McGill Pain Inventory
Time frame: 4 weeks
Overall improvement in Gastric Emptying (GE t-1/2)
Improvement in gastric emptying (GE t-1/2) compared to Placebo
Time frame: 8 week
Quality of Life based on SF-36
QOL score changes based on SF-36
Time frame: 4 weeks
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