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Methylnaltrexone for opioid-induced constipation in patients with advanced illness: a 3-month open-label treatment extension study

Authors :
Arthur G. Lipman
Sloan Beth Karver
Nancy Stambler
Gail Austin Cooney
Robert J. Israel
Source :
Journal of painpalliative care pharmacotherapy. 25(2)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Methylnaltrexone is a methylated form of the mu-opioid antagonist naltrexone that blocks peripheral effects of opioids without affecting centrally mediated analgesia. The authors conducted a 3-month open-label extension trial of methylnaltrexone in patients with advanced illness and opioid-induced constipation (OIC). Following completion of a 2-week double-blind (DB) trial, 82 patients with OIC who did not respond to laxatives received subcutaneous (SC) methylnaltrexone as needed for up to 3 months. Patients received 0.15 mg/kg as a first dose, adjusted to 0.3 mg/kg or 0.075 mg/kg as needed (maximum of one dose per 24 hours). Mean laxation response (rescue-free bowel movement within 4 hours) rates (DB phase, months 1, 2, 3 open-label phase) were 45.3%, 45.5%, 57.7%, and 57.3%, respectively, for patients treated with DB methylnaltrexone and 10.8%, 48.3%, 47.6%, and 52.1%, respectively, for patients treated with DB placebo. Median time to laxation among responders was 45 minutes (range 0-4 hours) for all doses. Approximately 50% of patients reported improvement in constipation distress. Patient and investigator global clinical impression of change scores also improved. There were minimal changes in pain scores and opioid withdrawal symptoms. Adverse events included abdominal pain and nausea, mostly mild or moderate in severity. SC methylnaltrexone administered PRN (as needed) for up to 3 months continued to rapidly induce laxation in advanced illness patients with OIC.

Details

ISSN :
15360539
Volume :
25
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of painpalliative care pharmacotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d307286d5b7af8f16a3fa6c806ad0305