To determine the efficacy of open -label transdermal patch on chronic nausea and emesis in patients with gastroparesis
Gastroparesis is a chronic syndrome associated with a delay in stomach emptying. The clinical presentation of gastroparesis is very heterogeneous but can generally categorized into emesis-predominant, regurgitation-predominant and dyspeptic-predominant gastroparesis. The underlying cause of nausea is very difficult to identify, and physician is often treat nausea symptomatically with anti-nausea and anti-emetic medications.4, 5 Phenothiazine's such as prochlorperazine (Compazine®), promethazine (Phenergan®), and trimethobenzamide (Tigan®) have significant side effects and the potential of withdraw symptoms when these medications are stopped. Serotonin (5- HT3) antagonists have central emetic effects and have been utilized in acute chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. Ondansetron, granisetron, palonosetron, and dolasetron are currently available as 5- HT3 antagonists for nausea and emesis. Oral dissolving and oral tablet formulation is suboptimal in outpatients with frequent emesis. Transdermal formulation may be optimal for patients with prolong nausea and vomiting, but data for chronic symptoms associated with gastroparesis is very limited. An open-label, uncontrolled treatment pilot study with 2-week cycles of granisetron transdermal patch for 24 weeks in patients with chronic nausea and vomiting associated with gastroparesis
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
transdermal sancuso patch
Indiana University
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Number of participants with improvement in chronic nausea and emesis.
Incidence of participants who benefitted from the use of the patch at the end of 2 weeks, 8 weeks, 16 weeks and 24 weeks as assessed by the Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index Nausea-Vomiting (GCSI-N/V). Mean subscale scores will compared for improvement every 6 weeks.
Time frame: 24 weeks
Number of participants with reduced medical utilization for gastroparesis.
Incidence of participants who required less medical resources during treatment by comparing subject self-reports of medication usage, ER visits, home health therapy, and hospitalizations 12 weeks before, 12 weeks after, and 24 weeks after treatment with open label transdermal granisetron.
Time frame: 24 weeks
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