1. Sarpogrelate, a 5-hT2A receptor antagonist in intermittent claudication. A phase II European study.
- Author
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Norgren L, Jawien A, Mátyás L, Riegerd H, and Arita K
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Double-Blind Method, Europe, Exercise Test, Female, Humans, Intermittent Claudication etiology, Intermittent Claudication metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A metabolism, Serotonin Antagonists pharmacology, Succinates pharmacology, Treatment Outcome, Walking, Intermittent Claudication drug therapy, Lower Extremity blood supply, Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Antagonists, Serotonin Antagonists therapeutic use, Succinates therapeutic use
- Abstract
This was a multinational, multicentre, double-blind Phase II study in Europe to evaluate the efficacy and safety of two dose regimens (200 mg bid and 200 mg tid) of sarpogrelate (MCI-9042, 5-HT2A receptor antagonist) compared to placebo in patients with stable, moderately severe intermittent claudication. Following a single-blind placebo run-in period of 6 weeks, 364 (309 male and 55 female) patients (59.2 +/- 8.4 years, mean +/- SD) were randomized to receive sarpogrelate 200 mg bid, 200 mg tid or placebo for 24 weeks with a follow-up of 8 weeks. The primary objective was the increase of absolute claudication distance (ACD) at the end of treatment (week 24) compared to placebo. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was performed on the log-transformed percentage of baseline ACD: loge(ACD/baseline). A responder analysis (defined as a > or = 50% improvement in ACD) was also performed. There was a marked training/placebo effect on the ACD which persisted up to 16 weeks. At 24 weeks the primary objective did not reach statistical significance (200mg bid vs placebo, p = 0.225; 200mg tid vs placebo, p = 0.580). In the responder analysis, 200 mg bid showed a statistically significant difference vs placebo (p = 0.035). In the exploratory analysis with completers (patients completing all treadmill tests), there was a statistical difference in ACD/baseline change for 200 mg bid (p = 0.035) and in the responder analysis for 200 mg tid (p = 0.044) at 24 weeks compared to placebo. Both treatments showed a carry-over effect for ACD during the 8-week follow-up (weeks 28-32). The treatment was well tolerated and no clinically significant safety concerns were reported. In conclusion, the study results confirm that sarpogrelate is well tolerated and although the primary endpoint failed to reach statistical significance, the responder analysis showed an increased absolute walking distance, which makes a further trial warranted, including a larger population, and possibly also a longer treatment period.
- Published
- 2006
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