Lacosamide in Painful Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy: A Phase 2 Double-blind Placebo-controlled Study.

Category Primary study
JournalThe Clinical journal of pain
Year 2007
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BACKGROUND:

Peripheral diabetic neuropathy affects between 20% and 45% of patients with diabetes.

OBJECTIVE:

To ascertain the effect of lacosamide on pain associated with peripheral diabetic neuropathy.

METHODS:

One hundred nineteen patients with a 1 to 5-year history of pain attributed to diabetic neuropathy and a score of ≥4 on the Likert pain scale entered the multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Lacosamide (N = 60) titrated from 100 to 400mg/d or maximum tolerated dose and placebo (N = 59) were the trial interventions. Primary efficacy criterion was change in pain score on the 11-point Likert pain scale. Secondary assessments included Short-Form McGill Pain and Short-Form-36 Quality of Life Questionnaires, sleep/activity interference, pain intensity, Patient and Clinical Global Impression of Change, and Profile of Mood. Patients receiving at least 1 dose of medication underwent safety evaluation.

RESULTS:

Ninety-four patients (lacosamide 46; placebo 48) completed the trial. Lacosamide had significantly (P = 0.039) better pain relief versus placebo (primary outcome). Improvements were also seen in secondary outcome measures. Adverse events occurred in 52 lacosamide and 44 placebo patients. Common adverse events, occurring in ≥ 5% of patients, were headache (lacosamide 18%, placebo 22%), dizziness (lacosamide 15%, placebo 8%), and nausea (lacosamide 12%, placebo 7%). Five lacosamide and 3 placebo patients withdrew for adverse events.

DISCUSSION:

Lacosamide seems to attenuate pain in diabetic neuropathy in doses up to 400mg/d and improves quality of life issues. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 1148e8d7efd458c34eab9ca4ac6d9039bc8ff910
First added on: Mar 13, 2012