1. Limited Systemic Exposure with Topical Glycopyrronium Tosylate in Primary Axillary Hyperhidrosis.
- Author
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Pariser DM, Lain EL, Mamelok RD, Drew J, and Mould DR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Axilla, Child, Cholinergic Antagonists, Humans, Middle Aged, Muscarinic Antagonists adverse effects, Young Adult, Glycopyrrolate adverse effects, Hyperhidrosis drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Glycopyrronium tosylate (GT; Qbrexza
® [glycopyrronium] cloth, 2.4%) is a topical anticholinergic approved (USA) for primary axillary hyperhidrosis in patients aged ≥ 9 years., Objective: The objective of this study was to compare the pharmacokinetics and safety of GT to oral glycopyrrolate (phase I study) and assess the relationship between glycopyrronium pharmacokinetics and anticholinergic-related adverse events or efficacy with population pharmacokinetics using data from two phase II studies., Methods: In the phase I study, study staff applied GT to axillae of patients with primary axillary hyperhidrosis (aged 9-65 years) once daily (5 days); oral glycopyrrolate was administered to healthy adults (aged 18-65 years) every 8 hours (15 days). In the phase II studies (NCT02016885 [20 December, 2013], NCT02129660 [2 May, 2014]), adults with primary axillary hyperhidrosis applied topical glycopyrronium (0.8-3.2%) or vehicle to axillae once daily (4 weeks). Pharmacokinetic and adverse event data were collected in all studies., Results: Glycopyrronium pharmacokinetic parameters were similar between adult and pediatric patients treated with GT; there was no evidence of accumulation. Systemic absorption of glycopyrronium was lower with GT vs oral glycopyrrolate. No anticholinergic-related adverse events occurred with GT in the phase I study, while dry mouth and nasal dryness occurred with oral glycopyrrolate; anticholinergic adverse events occurred in the phase II studies. In the population pharmacokinetic analysis, frequency/severity of anticholinergic-related adverse events increased with higher glycopyrronium concentration; no relationship was observed between efficacy and pharmacokinetic measures., Conclusions: These studies indicate limited absorption of GT compared to oral glycopyrrolate and a low risk of anticholinergic adverse events with proper GT administration when following instructions for use (wipe each underarm once with same cloth, wash hands, avoid ocular contact).- Published
- 2021
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