This multi-site Phase 3 clinical trial is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled and open label active-controlled study to identify the safety and efficacy of a repeated-dose regimen of DPI-386 nasal gel (intranasal scopolamine gel) for the prevention and treatment of motion sickness. The study will be conducted aboard Navy fleet or Marine ships undergoing military operations to obtain data in an operationally relevant real world environment.
The study will have three arms: DPI-386 nasal gel, placebo nasal gel, and Transderm Scop® (1.5 mg/72 hours; transdermal scopolamine patch \[TDS\], the current standard of care for the treatment of motion sickness). The study will include 100 subjects per arm, for a total of 300 subjects (n=300). Multiple ships and ships' crews will be used, until the required enrollment is completed. The DPI-386 Nasal Gel and placebo nasal gel arms will be double-blinded, whereas the TDS arm will remain unblinded. Both DPI-386 Nasal Gel and placebo nasal gel will be administered twice daily over the six consecutive Treatment Days. The two daily doses of DPI-386 Nasal Gel or placebo nasal gel will be separated by a minimum of six hours ± 15 minutes, and will occur during the subject's on-duty period. The TDS patch will be administered on Treatment Days 1 and 4.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
300
Nasal Gel
Patch
NAMRU-D
Dayton, Ohio, United States
RECRUITINGEfficacy of DPI-386 Nasal Gel
Compare the efficacy of DPI-386 Nasal Gel (0.2 mg scopolamine HBr per dose, maximum of two doses per day, for a maximum of six doses over three consecutive days) with that of the TDS patch and placebo nasal gel in the prevention and treatment of nausea associated with motion sickness. The efficacy endpoint will be determined by comparing the Motion Sickness Assessment Questionnaire (MSAQ) scores over the treatment period across all three treatment arm. Sixteen symptoms are listed, with symptoms differentiated along four dimensions: gastrointestinal, central, peripheral, and sopite-related. Each symptom is scored from 1 to 9 in severity and scores then calculated. All 16 items were collected from the general public instead of experts, allowing for a more accurate wording of the symptomology experienced by persons outside of hysiological sciences.
Time frame: 3 days
Safety of DPI-386 Nasal Gel in terms of cognitive effects
Compare the safety of DPI-386 Nasal Gel with that of the TDS patch and placebo nasal gel, with an emphasis on cognitive effects by incidence of treatment related adverse events.
Time frame: 24 hours
Efficacy of DPI-386 and severe nausea
Compare the efficacies of DPI-386 Nasal Gel, TDS patch, and placebo nasal gel in severity of nausea. Respondents specify their degree of nausea by indicating a point along a continuous 100mm line between two end-points; left one is for "No nausea" and the right one for "Very severe nausea". Scoring is based on the length from left point and a higher score means more severe degree of nausea. Severity of nausea will measured by the Nausea Assessment (Visual Analog Scale) (VAS)) over the treatment period.
Time frame: 3 days
Safety of DPI-386 Nasal Gel in terms of cognition
Compare the safety of DPI-386 Nasal Gel with that of TDS patch and placebo nasal gel in terms of cognition as measured by the Psychomotor Vigilance Tests (PVT). The (PVT) is a neurocognitive assessment that measures alertness and tests sustained attention and reaction time. It was originally developed for sleep studies, and involves simple reaction time testing by requiring the participant to push a button as soon as the stimulus (a light) appears. After a response, the reaction time (in ms) is displayed. The inter-stimulus interval varies from two to 10 seconds, so it is not predictable, and the entire task takes 10 minutes.
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Time frame: 24 hours