Suvorexant in Elderly Patients with Insomnia: Pooled Analyses of Data from Phase III Randomized Controlled Clinical Trials

Suvorexant is an orexin receptor antagonist approved for treating insomnia at doses of 10–20 mg. Previously reported phase III results showed that suvorexant was effective and well-tolerated in a combined-age population (elderly and nonelderly adults). The present analysis evaluated the clinical pro...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of geriatric psychiatry 2017-07, Vol.25 (7), p.791-802
Hauptverfasser: Herring, W. Joseph, Connor, Kathryn M., Snyder, Ellen, Snavely, Duane B., Zhang, Ying, Hutzelmann, Jill, Matzura-Wolfe, Deborah, Benca, Ruth M., Krystal, Andrew D., Walsh, James K., Lines, Christopher, Roth, Thomas, Michelson, David
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Suvorexant is an orexin receptor antagonist approved for treating insomnia at doses of 10–20 mg. Previously reported phase III results showed that suvorexant was effective and well-tolerated in a combined-age population (elderly and nonelderly adults). The present analysis evaluated the clinical profile of suvorexant specifically in the elderly. Prespecified subgroup analyses of pooled 3-month data from two (efficacy) and three (safety) randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trials. In each trial, elderly (≥65 years) patients with insomnia were randomized to suvorexant 30 mg, suvorexant 15 mg, and placebo. By design, fewer patients were randomized to 15 mg. Patient-reported and polysomnographic (subset of patients) sleep maintenance and onset endpoints were measured. Suvorexant 30 mg (N = 319) was effective compared with placebo (N = 318) on patient-reported and polysomnographic sleep maintenance, and onset endpoints at Night 1 (polysomnographic endpoints)/Week 1 (patient-reported endpoints), Month 1, and Month 3. Suvorexant 15 mg (N = 202 treated) was also effective across these measures, although the onset effect was less evident at later time points. The percentages of patients discontinuing because of adverse events over 3 months were 6.4% for 30 mg (N = 627 treated), 3.5% for 15 mg (N = 202 treated), and 5.5% for placebo (N = 469 treated). Somnolence was the most common adverse event (8.8% for 30 mg, 5.4% for 15 mg, 3.2% for placebo). Suvorexant generally improved sleep maintenance and onset over 3 months of nightly treatment and was well-tolerated in elderly patients with insomnia (clinicaltrials.gov; NCT01097616, NCT01097629, NCT01021813).
ISSN:1064-7481
1545-7214
DOI:10.1016/j.jagp.2017.03.004