Neuropathic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Role of Qutenza (Topical Capsaicin 8%) in Treating Neuropathic Pain From Critical Ischaemia in Patients With End-stage Renal Failure
Critical ischaemia is pain at rest as the result of poor blood flow and lack of oxygen being
delivered to the tissues. It normally affects the hands and feet and can be very
debilitating. It is particularly common and difficult to treat in patients with end stage
renal failure
Patients with renal failure are often high risk of any operative intervention which might
help the pain. Often the only treatment options are painkillers. Unfortunately however, the
commonly used painkillers, for example morphine, are known to cause worse side effects in
patients with renal failure (drowsiness, confusion etc.
Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) is a new treatment made from chilli peppers which is applied
to the skin as a patch and works directly at the nerve endings in the skin to prevent pain.
It therefore should not have the systemic side effects of other drugs. It has been
demonstrated to be beneficial in other painful conditions for example post-shingles pain and
nerve pain from HIV. It has never been used for critical ischaemia before.
We propose to investigate the efficacy of Qutenza in treating patients with end stage renal
failure and painful ischaemia. We will recruit 20 patients with painful ischaemia and treat
them with Qutenza. We will follow them up for 12 weeks and monitor the change in their pain
scores.
Peripheral vascular disease is common in end-stage renal failure (ESRF) affecting 24-77% of
patients (Stack, 2005). Critical ischaemia (pain at rest caused by insufficient blood supply
to a limb) is notoriously difficult to treat in this patient group. Advanced disease and
extensive co-morbidities limit surgical revascularisation options of proximal vessels
(Blankensteijn et al., 1996) and calciphylaxis (a process of calcification within the small
vessels unique to patients with end-stage renal failure) has few effective treatments (Ng &
Peng, 2011). Often the only treatment option is symptomatic relief with strong analgesics.
Effective pain relief in patients with end-stage renal failure can be difficult to achieve.
The active metabolites of many opiates are renally-excreted and side effects are more common
in patients with end-stage renal failure. In particular, confusion and drowsiness limit
their use. Similarly drugs commonly used for neuropathic pain, such as gabapentin, have not
be investigated in clinical trials in patients with end-stage renal failure (Kurella et al.,
1993).
A drug which is not renally excreted, has minimal systemic absorption and does not require
dose adjustment in renal failure, is an attractive treatment option for patients with renal
failure.
Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) is an advanced dermal application system designed for rapid
delivery of capsaicin into the skin. The high concentration of capsaicin results in
reversible desensitisation of TRPV-1 expressing cutaneous sensory nerve endings and
reduction in nerve fibre density in the epidermis (Noto et al., 2009). The resulting pain
relief is long-lasting (12 weeks after a single application) (Backonja et al., 2008);
Simpson et al., 2008). Previous phase III studies have demonstrated a significant reduction
in neuropathic pain in patients with post-herpetic neuralgia (Blonsky et al., 2009) and HIV
neuropathy (Noto et al., 2099; Simpson et al., 2008) with a good tolerability profile and it
is now licensed for use in treatment of neuropathic pain in these patient groups.
The efficacy and tolerability of Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) has been evaluated in over
1,600 patients within clinical trials, with a reduction in pain scores at 8 weeks from
30-32% to 20-24% compared to an active control (capsaicin 0.04%) (Simpson et al., 2008).
Patients frequently developed mild irritant symptoms of erythema and itch at the site of
application, but significant side effects of blistering were rare occurring in <5%.
Currently Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) is not licensed for the treatment of diabetics
however there is evidence from a moderate number of diabetics enrolled into clinical trials
that Qutenza is both safe and effective in this patient group also. Webster et al, (2011)
treated a total of 91 patients with painful diabetic nephropathy and found a 31.5% reduction
in mean pain scores during weeks 2-12 post treatment. There was no difference in the
incidence of local side effects experienced by diabetics and non-diabetics (Backonja et al,
2011). One patient did develop an ulcer in the area of treatment however it is unclear
whether this related to the treatment or not (Webster et al, 2011).
Diabetic patients will be enrolled into this trial due to the frequency of diabetic patients
with renal failure and the contributing role of diabetes in small vessel disease leading to
critical ischaemia. The distinction between painful diabetic neuropathy and digital critical
ischaemia can be difficult to make clinically and it may be that a small proportion of
patients recruited for this study also have an element of diabetic neuropathy in addition to
their critical ischaemia. In view of the concern with ulceration of the feet in diabetics
treated with Qutenza, patients with diabetic neuropathy causing a loss of sensation will be
excluded from having their feet treated.
Pain from critical ischaemia is multi-modal and notoriously difficult to treat particularly
in patients with established renal failure in whom other analgesic agents are poorly
tolerated. A drug such as Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) which is not renally excreted, has
minimal systemic absorption and does not require dose adjustment in renal failure, is an
attractive treatment option for patients with renal failure.
This is a single centre, prospective observational trial evaluating efficacy and
tolerability of Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) for the treatment of digital critical
ischaemia in patients with end stage renal failure.
Primary Objective:
• To evaluate the safety and efficacy of Qutenza (topical capsaicin 8%) in relieving chronic
neuropathic pain from digital critical ischaemia in patients with end stage renal failure
Secondary objective:
• To evaluate Quality of Life (QoL) measures in patients with end stage renal failure who
have chronic neuropathic pain from critical ischaemia treated with Qutenza (topical
capsaicin 8%)
;
Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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