Knee Osteoarthritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy and Safety of Glucosamine Sulfate Versus a Pure Analgesic (Acetaminophen/Paracetamol) and Placebo in Patients Suffering From Osteoarthritis of the Knee
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of glucosamine sulfate versus placebo on the symptoms of knee osteoarthritis after 6 months of treatment, using acetaminophen as a reference symptomatic medication.
Osteoarthritis is a common degenerative joint disease, affecting a large proportion of the
general population. Its severity is progressive and often requires long-term treatment
courses.
Medications for osteoarthritis may affect symptoms (pain and function limitation) and/or
modify joint structure.
Pharmacological agents usually employed to treat symptoms generally include unspecific drugs
such as pure analgesics and non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), as well as
compounds that are possibly disease specific, since they probably interact with some of the
osteoarthritis pathogenetic factors: glucosamine sulfate is one of these agents.
Glucosamine sulfate has recently attracted the attention of the scientific community and of
patients, because two long-term (3 years) clinical trials in comparison with placebo, showed
that this is the first agent able to retard the progression of anatomic joint structure
changes in knee osteoarthritis, besides controlling the progression of symptoms.
Earlier studies had shown that glucosamine sulfate is effective in relieving the symptoms of
osteoarthritis also over shorter treatment courses (few weeks or months), in comparison with
placebo. In addition, glucosamine sulfate efficacy in short studies was at least comparable
to that of unspecific symptomatic medications such as conventional NSAIDs, whilst being
better tolerated. However, all practice guidelines for the treatment of osteoarthritis
suggest acetaminophen (paracetamol) as the oral analgesic to try first and, if successful,
the preferred long-term symptomatic medication.
This trial was therefore designed to confirm the efficacy of glucosamine sulfate in
comparison with placebo and to assess its relative value compared with acetaminophen. In
fact, superiority of a well tolerated drug such as glucosamine sulfate and with the
long-term treatment potential shown in other trials, may represent a major therapeutic
advantage.
The treatment has a duration of 6 months, that is believed to be the minimum length to
assess the effects of a symptomatic medication in osteoarthritis.
The study is performed according to a multicenter, randomised, placebo- and
reference-controlled, double-blind (double-dummy), parallel group, prospective design.
The sample size has been calculated on the basis of the expected efficacy of the test drug
on the primary outcome (Lequesne index).
Following a screening visit and a short baseline period to check adherence to the
inclusion/exclusion criteria, a total of at least 300 patients with knee osteoarthritis are
randomised to receive either oral glucosamine sulfate soluble powder 1500 mg once-a-day, or
acetaminophen tablets 1000 mg three times a day (total 3g/day, as recommended in Europe), or
placebo, for 6 months. The rescue medication for flare episodes consists of the standardized
use (according to specific instructions given to the patients) of ibuprofen 400 mg tablets,
whose consumption is recorded in a patient daily diary.
The primary efficacy outcome measure is represented by the change in the Lequesne
algo-functional index (assessed at clinic visits) after 6 months in the intention-to treat
population, analysed by the General Linear Model (GLM) procedure for ANOVA, with Dunnet's
pairwise comparisons versus placebo. Efficacy in patients completing treatment according to
the protocol (per-protocol completers) will be also assessed. Secondary efficacy outcome
measures include the changes in the WOMAC index and the calculation of the proportion of
patients that can be defined responders to treatment according to the Osteoarthritis
Research Society International (OARSI) criteria (2000). The use of the rescue medication is
also assessed.
Safety is assessed by reporting of adverse events and by routine laboratory tests.
The glucosamine sulfate substance used in this trial (crystalline glucosamine sulfate) is a
prescription drug in Europe and elsewhere, mostly used in its 1500 mg powder for oral
solution formulation to be administered once daily. This is the substance/formulation that
was effective and safe in the vast majority of glucosamine clinical trials, including the
long-term, 3-year studies.
Differently than in Europe and other countries, glucosamine formulations are marketed in the
United States as dietary supplements. They include glucosamine sulfate substances different
than the original prescription preparation, other glucosamine salts (mainly glucosamine
hydrochloride), and are administered according to different dosage schemes (mainly as oral
solid formulations that provide a total 1500 mg dose, but divided in three daily intakes,
t.i.d.). In clinical trials conducted so far, these formulations failed to show the same
efficacy of the original glucosamine sulfate prescription preparation.
The present study uses therefore the original prescription crystalline glucosamine sulfate
given once-a-day (unum-in-die, u.i.d.) and it is therefore named the Glucosamine Unum In Die
Efficacy (GUIDE) Trial.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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