Alcohol Dependence Clinical Trial
Official title:
International Multicentre Randomized Double-blind Placebo Controlled Phase III Clinical Study to Assess Efficacy and Safety of Odelepran, 125 mg, for the Use in Patient With Alcohol Dependence
Verified date | May 2019 |
Source | R-Pharm |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study was to assess efficacy and safety of the study drug Odelepran, 125 mg as compared to placebo in the treatment of alcohol dependence in adult outpatients.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 644 |
Est. completion date | May 14, 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | April 16, 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Signed and dated informed consent. - Outpatients (not hospitalized by the moment of randomization). - Average alcohol consumption during 30 days prior to screening higher than a medium drinking risk level (men: > 4 drinks/day or 14 drinks/week; women > 3 drinks/day or 7 drinks/week) according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) criteria. - Patients diagnosed with alcohol dependence according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10, assessed with the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI). - Abstaining from alcohol during 3 days prior to screening and 3 days before randomization confirmed by the test for alcohol in exhaled air (less than 0,02 %). - For women retaining childbearing potential - negative pregnancy test and consent to use reliable contraception methods (as well as for men) throughout the study period, including the study follow up period. - Patients able to comply with study protocol as per investigator's opinion. - Availability of a patient's trustee who reside with the patient. A trustee is defined here as a person who spends with the patient at least 4 hours a day. The trustee must give his/her consent for participation in the study as the patient's representative. - Study drug monotherapy must be acceptable for the patient as per investigator's opinion. Exclusion Criteria: - Hypersensitivity to Odelepran or to any excipient of the study drug (including lactose intolerance). - Binge drinking (more than 5 day consecutive days of heavy drinking) during 30 days prior to screening. Heavy drinking is considered as 5 or more drinks per day for men and 4 or more drinks per day for women. - Ever diagnosed schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar mood disorder or any other psychiatric disorder, except for alcohol dependence. History of alcohol induced psychosis. - Anxiety or depressive disorder present at enrollment into the study. Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) score higher than 15. - High suicidal risk confirmed by MINI. - Previous use of opioid antagonists implants less than 3 months prior to screening; use of long-acting naltrexone injections (e,g, Vivitrol) less than 4 weeks after the first injection and 3 months after the second and the following injections; use of cyanamide (Kolme) less than 2 weeks prior to screening, use of oral opioid antagonists or disulfiram during 2 weeks prior to screening. - Psychotherapeutic "coding" (a method when the patient is induced a misbelief that alcohol consumption would lead to death, expected to result from undisclosed pharmacological manipulation) that took place during less than 3 months prior to screening. - Use of psychotropic medication less than 3 weeks before the screening (for long-acting and 'depot' formulations) or 1 week before the screening (for other formulations) except for those used to treat alcohol withdrawal syndrome. - Severe alcohol withdrawal syndrome (severity of alcohol withdrawal more than 10 on Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment of Alcohol (CIWA-Ar) scale). - History of seizures (excepting febrile seizers). Severe brain injury, history of intracranial neoplasms and/or intracranial haemorrhages or any conditions that impose the risk of seizures. History of anticonvulsive therapy. - Any clinical condition affecting cognitive or other psychoneurological functioning (verified for head injury with the loss of consciousness that lasted more than 1 hour, or resulted in cognitive or behavioral impairment, stroke, encephalopathy, dementia, neurodegenerative disorder, etc). Except for mild cognitive impairment. - Mental retardation of syndromes of severe organic brain injury. - Use of drugs of abuse (opioids, cannabinoids, amphetamines, etc.) or diagnoses of substance addiction/dependence at the moment of screening or positive urine drug screen test. - Significant liver function impairment (aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) higher than 3 upper limits of normal range or diagnosis of hepatic failure, class B or C by Child Pugh). - Severe renal failure (creatinine clearance calculated at the screening less than 30 ml/min or renal replacement therapy). - Severe cardiovascular system disorders: unstable angina, poorly controlled arrhythmia, cardiac failure of III or IV class by New-York Heart Association (NYHA), acute myocardial infarction within the past 6 months. - HIV-infection, hepatitis B or C. - Decompensated diabetes mellitus (determined glycated hemoglobin HbAc1 level more than 7,5%) - Other concomitant disorders and conditions that, as per investigator's opinion, put the patient's safety under risk or that could affect the analysis of safety data. - Any diagnosed or suspected malignancy. - Pregnancy, breast feeding. - Participation in any other clinical study during 30 days or 6 periods of half life (depending on what is longer) prior to screening. - Patients that need treatment with drugs prohibited by the study protocol (opioid antagonists, psychotropic medications, opioid analgesics, anticonvulsants, central muscle relaxants, antineoplastic drugs, glucocorticoids). |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Kazakhstan | Republican Research center of psychiatry, psychotherapy and addictology | Almaty | |
Russian Federation | Republican clinical mental hospital n.a. V.M. Bekhterev | Kazan | |
Russian Federation | First Moscow State Medical University named after I.M.Sechenov | Moscow | |
Russian Federation | Institute of mental health and addictology, LCC | Moscow | |
Russian Federation | Murmansk regional narcological dispensary | Murmansk | |
Russian Federation | Clinical mental hospital #1, Dispensery department | Nizhny Novgorod | |
Russian Federation | Clinical mental hospital #1,Medico-rehabilitational department | Nizhny Novgorod | |
Russian Federation | Research center Feniks, LLC | Rostov-on-Don | |
Russian Federation | Baltic Medicine LLC | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | City addiction clinic, 2nd department | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | City addiction clinic, Petrogradsky region | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | City addiction clinic, Vasileostrovsky region | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | Doctor SAN, LLC | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | Eco-Safety Research Center | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | Pavlov First Saint Petersburg State | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | Saint Petersburg regional narcological dispensary | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | St.Petersburg V.M. Bekhterev Psychoneurological Research Institute, addictive pathology department | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | St.Petersburg V.M. Bekhterev Psychoneurological Research Institute, alcohol dependance department | Saint Petersburg | |
Russian Federation | Clinical city hospital #2 n.a. V.I. Razumovsky | Saratow | |
Russian Federation | Mental Health Research Institute | Tomsk | |
Russian Federation | Lion-Med, LLC | Voronezh | |
Russian Federation | Yaroslavl Region Clinical Mental Hospital | Yaroslavl |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
R-Pharm | Synergy Research Inc. |
Kazakhstan, Russian Federation,
Sobell L.C., Sobell M.B. (1992) Timeline Follow-Back. In: Litten R.Z., Allen J.P. (eds) Measuring Alcohol Consumption. Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Number of hospitalizations due to alcohol intoxication | 6 month prior to the baseline and week 28 of treatment | ||
Primary | Change from baseline in the mean daily alcohol consumption | Calculated as total number of drinks in month divided by number of days in month. | Baseline and Week 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, 20, and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in the number of days of abstinence per month as compared to the baseline | Baseline and Week 24 of treatment | ||
Secondary | Change in the percentage of days of heavy drinking per month as compared to the baseline | Heavy drinking to be considered as 5 or more drinks per day for men and 4 or more drinks per day for women. | Baseline and Week 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Time to the first day of drinking | Full abstinence period duration. | From baseline till the first day of alcohol consumption | |
Secondary | Time to the first day of heavy drinking | Heavy drinking to be considered as 5 or more drinks per day for men and 4 or more drinks per day for women. | From baseline till the first day of heavy drinking | |
Secondary | Change from baseline in alcohol consumption per drinking day | Calculated as total number of drinks in month divided by number of drinking days in month. | Baseline and Week Week 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, 20 and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in alcohol craving from the baseline (based on Obsessive-Compulsive Drinking Scale (OCDS) score) | The OCDS is a validated scale consisted of 14 items for patient self-assessment of alcohol craving. Scoring by simple addition. Higher scores indicate greater level of craving (Anton R.F., Moak D.H., Latham P.K., 1996). | Baseline and Week 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, 20, and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in alcohol craving (based on completed VIsual Analogue Scale) | VIsual Analogue Scale (VAS) ranged from 0 to 100, where 0 corresponds to "no craving at all" and 100 corresponds to "maximal craving" | Baseline and Week 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, 20, and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in patient's self-assessed quality of life (by the SF-36 Questionnaire) as compared to the baseline | The Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) is a validated 36 item self-report Quality of Life Questionnaire that measures eight multi-item dimensions of health: physical functioning, social functioning, role limitations due to physical problems, role limitations due to emotional problems, mental health, energy/vitality, pain, and general health perception. Version 2 was used. (Ware J.E., 2000) | Baseline and Week 8, 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Proportion of patient with clinical improvement as assessed by Clinical Global Impression-improvement (CGI-I) scale | CGI-I scale is a 7 point scale that requires the investigator to assess how much the patient's illness has improved or worsened relative to a baseline. Rated as: 1 - very much improved, 2 - much improved, 3 - minimally improved, 4 - no change, 5 - minimally worse, 6 - much worse, 7 - very much worse. (Guy W, 1970; 1976) | Week 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, 20, and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Efficacy index of CGI | Efficacy index is a 4×4 rating scale that assesses the therapeutic effect of treatment with psychiatric medication (with possible considerations: 1 - unchanged or worse; 2 - minimal — slight improvement which doesn't alter status of care of patient; 3 - moderate marked — decided improvement, partial remission of symptoms; 4 - marked - vast improvement, complete or nearly complete remission of all symptoms) and associated side effects (with possible considerations: 1 - none; 2 - do not significantly interfere with patient's functioning; 3 - significantly interfere with patient's functioning; 4 - outweigh therapeutic effect). Derived by dividing therapeutic effect score by side effects score. The lower efficacy index corresponds to the better result (Guy W, 1970; 1976) | Week 12 and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Change from baseline in the Drinker Inventory of Consequences questionnaire (DrInC-2R) total score | DrInC-2R is a validated self-report questionnaire consisted of 50 questions to measure adverse consequences of alcohol abuse in five areas: Interpersonal, Physical, Social, Impulsive, and Intrapersonal as well as frequency of these consequences (answers given on frequency scale grade from 0-3: 0 - never, 1 - once or a few times, 2 - once or twice a week 3 - daily or almost daily). Higher scores indicate greater levels of alcohol-related problems. (Miller W.R., 1995) | 3 previous months, baseline and Week 4, 8, 12, 16, 20 and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in impulsivity (Barratt impulsivity scale by the subscales and by the total score) from the baseline | Barratt impulsivity scale (BIS-11) is a validated self-report questionnaire composed of 30 items describing common impulsive or non-impulsive (for reverse scored items) behaviors and preferences. Items are scored on a 4-point scale: Rarely/Never = 1, Occasionally = 2, Often = 3, Almost Always/Always = 4. Total score is assessed. The higher total score corresponds to the more impulsive behavior (Patton et al., 1995) | Baseline and Week 8, 16 and 24 of treatment | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients completed the trial | Week 24 of treatment | ||
Secondary | Time to untimely withdrawal from the study | From baseline to Week 24 of treatment | ||
Secondary | Number of the early dropouts from the study | Per reasons | Week 24 of treatment |
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