A Randomized Thorough QT Study of Apomorphine Sublingual Film in Patients With Parkinson's Disease

A randomized thorough QT study was conducted to assess the effects of apomorphine sublingual film (SL‐APO) on corrected QT interval (QTc) and other cardiac conduction parameters in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and “OFF” episodes. Patients were titrated to an SL‐APO dose that resulted...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical pharmacology in drug development 2022-09, Vol.11 (9), p.1068-1077
Hauptverfasser: Stocchi, Fabrizio, Peckham, Elizabeth L., De Pandis, Maria Francesca, Sciarappa, Ken, Kleiman, Robert, Agbo, Felix, Olanow, C. Warren, Blum, David, Navia, Bradford
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container_end_page 1077
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1068
container_title Clinical pharmacology in drug development
container_volume 11
creator Stocchi, Fabrizio
Peckham, Elizabeth L.
De Pandis, Maria Francesca
Sciarappa, Ken
Kleiman, Robert
Agbo, Felix
Olanow, C. Warren
Blum, David
Navia, Bradford
description A randomized thorough QT study was conducted to assess the effects of apomorphine sublingual film (SL‐APO) on corrected QT interval (QTc) and other cardiac conduction parameters in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and “OFF” episodes. Patients were titrated to an SL‐APO dose that resulted in FULL “ON,” followed by up to two additional doses (maximum 60 mg), then randomized at the highest tolerated dose to a treatment sequence of SL‐APO, placebo, and moxifloxacin (400 mg, positive control) in a three‐way crossover design. Changes from baseline in time‐matched, placebo‐adjusted Fridericia‐corrected QTc interval (ΔΔQTcF) and Bazett‐corrected QTc interval (ΔΔQTcB) were analyzed from postdose electrocardiograms. Forty patients were randomized and received single doses of study treatments. Upper limits of 90% confidence intervals (CIs) for ΔΔQTcF of SL‐APO were below the 10‐millisecond regulatory threshold at all prespecified timepoints, demonstrating no clinically significant effect on QTcF. Lower limits of 90% CIs for ΔΔQTcF of moxifloxacin exceeded the 5‐millisecond regulatory threshold at all timepoints up to 3 hours, confirming assay sensitivity. SL‐APO had no clinically meaningful effects on QTcB, PR/QRS intervals, heart rate, or electrocardiogram‐derived morphology (EudraCT identifier: 2016‐001762‐29; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03187301).
doi_str_mv 10.1002/cpdd.1147
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Warren ; Blum, David ; Navia, Bradford</creator><creatorcontrib>Stocchi, Fabrizio ; Peckham, Elizabeth L. ; De Pandis, Maria Francesca ; Sciarappa, Ken ; Kleiman, Robert ; Agbo, Felix ; Olanow, C. Warren ; Blum, David ; Navia, Bradford</creatorcontrib><description>A randomized thorough QT study was conducted to assess the effects of apomorphine sublingual film (SL‐APO) on corrected QT interval (QTc) and other cardiac conduction parameters in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and “OFF” episodes. Patients were titrated to an SL‐APO dose that resulted in FULL “ON,” followed by up to two additional doses (maximum 60 mg), then randomized at the highest tolerated dose to a treatment sequence of SL‐APO, placebo, and moxifloxacin (400 mg, positive control) in a three‐way crossover design. Changes from baseline in time‐matched, placebo‐adjusted Fridericia‐corrected QTc interval (ΔΔQTcF) and Bazett‐corrected QTc interval (ΔΔQTcB) were analyzed from postdose electrocardiograms. Forty patients were randomized and received single doses of study treatments. Upper limits of 90% confidence intervals (CIs) for ΔΔQTcF of SL‐APO were below the 10‐millisecond regulatory threshold at all prespecified timepoints, demonstrating no clinically significant effect on QTcF. Lower limits of 90% CIs for ΔΔQTcF of moxifloxacin exceeded the 5‐millisecond regulatory threshold at all timepoints up to 3 hours, confirming assay sensitivity. 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Warren</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Blum, David</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Navia, Bradford</creatorcontrib><title>A Randomized Thorough QT Study of Apomorphine Sublingual Film in Patients With Parkinson's Disease</title><title>Clinical pharmacology in drug development</title><addtitle>Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev</addtitle><description>A randomized thorough QT study was conducted to assess the effects of apomorphine sublingual film (SL‐APO) on corrected QT interval (QTc) and other cardiac conduction parameters in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and “OFF” episodes. Patients were titrated to an SL‐APO dose that resulted in FULL “ON,” followed by up to two additional doses (maximum 60 mg), then randomized at the highest tolerated dose to a treatment sequence of SL‐APO, placebo, and moxifloxacin (400 mg, positive control) in a three‐way crossover design. 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subjects Apomorphine - adverse effects
apomorphine sublingual film
Double-Blind Method
Electrocardiography
Humans
Moxifloxacin - adverse effects
Parkinson Disease - drug therapy
Parkinson's disease
pharmacokinetics
QT interval
“OFF” episodes
title A Randomized Thorough QT Study of Apomorphine Sublingual Film in Patients With Parkinson's Disease
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