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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01596764

Effects of Methylnaltrexone in Comparison to Naloxone on Loperamide-induced Delay of the Oro-cecal, Whole-gut and Colon Transit Time.

Effects of Extended Release Methylnaltrexone Bromide (150 mg b.i.d.) in Comparison to Extended Release Naloxone Hydrochloride (20 mg b.i.d.) on Loperamide-induced Delay of the Oro-cecal, Whole-gut and Colon Transit Time in Healthy Subjects.

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
16 (actual)
Sponsor
University Medicine Greifswald · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to describe the effects of repeated-dose methylnaltrexone in preventing loperamide-induced delay of whole-gut, oro-cecal and colon transit time and to measure pharmacokinetics of methylnaltrexone and naloxone-3-glucuronide after oral administration of methylnaltrexone and naloxone.

Detailed description

The increasing prevalence of opioid use and consequently, opioid-induced bowel dysfunction has prompted interest in identifying effective treatment options. Until now, the treatment of opioid-induced constipation (OIC) has been viewed as an extension of constipation in general. Traditional therapies for constipation such as bulking agents, stool softeners, stimulant laxatives, and osmotic agents are commonly utilized, but the effects of such therapies are nonspecific and are often generating diarrhea or cramps and some of these drugs cause severe side effects. Furthermore, these conventional measures are sometimes insufficient in some patients, especially those requiring increasing doses of opioids. Opioid-induced constipation is predominantly mediated by gastrointestinal μ-opioid receptors. Selective blockade of these peripheral receptors might relieve constipation without compromising centrally mediated effects of opioid analgesia or precipitating withdrawal. Naloxone is a competitive antagonist of opioid receptors inside and outside the central nervous system used as a solution for injection in the treatment of opioid overdose. When administered orally, it can reduce opioid-induced constipation due to a local action in the gut. It has a high first-pass metabolism, which is an advantage as the laxative effect can be achieved due to the local action in the gut without significant antagonism of the narcotic analgesic effect of opioid. In some patients, however, withdrawal symptoms or reduction of analgesia was seen. Another way to prevent central actions is the use of opioid antagonists which cannot penetrate the blood-brain barrier such as methylnaltrexone and alvimopan. Their antagonism of μ-opioid receptors in the gastrointestinal tract seems to reverse opioid-induced gut hypomotility. It is assumed that methylnaltrexone after oral administration influences intestinal motility by local blockade of opioid receptors along the luminal surface of the gut. Because methylnaltrexone seems to have an absorption window in the proximal small intestine as caused by lower activity of P-glycoprotein in that region (similar to other quatenary compounds, eg. trospium chloride), immediate release (uncoated) methylnaltrexone is better absorbed form the small intestine and might therefore be less active than the enteric-coated drug. However, the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data on oral methylnaltrexone are very preliminarily so far. The data were obtained in rather small groups with inadequate study design (no randomization, no cross-over, lack of sensitive analytical assays etc.) Furthermore, intestinal transit time has been measured using lactulose as a probe compound that has an own laxative effect. Therefore, the following clinical study was initiated to proof the concept in a controlled clinical trial in healthy subjects, whether extended release methylnaltrexone antagonizes the loperamide induced delay of oro-cecal and whole-gut transit time in comparison to extended release naloxone. Loperamide is an opioid agonist and acts on the µ-receptors in the myenteric plexus. It does not affect the central nervous system like other opioids. Loperamide significantly prolongs the mouth-to-cecum transit time as evaluated by the lactulose hydrogen breath test. This effect may be antagonized by the concomitant administration of naloxone.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGLoperamide placebo200 ml apple juice
DRUGLoperamide20 ml Loperamid-ratiopharm® Lösung (ratiopharm) in 180 ml apple juice containing 4 mg of loperamide hydrochloride (prepared before administration)
DEVICEColon Transit5 capsules containing radio-opaque markers of different shapes, respectively
DRUGSulfasalazineAzulfidine® Tabletten 500 mg (Pharmacia/Pfizer) containing 500 mg immediate release sulfasalazine
DRUGPlacebo of MNTX and NLXPlacebo capsule (hard gelatine capsule containing multiple sugar spheres)
DRUGNaloxoneNaloxone hydrochloride 20 mg Extended Release Capsule equivalent to 18 mg naloxone (hard gelatine capsule containing a single NLX-ER tablet and multiple sugar spheres)
DRUGMethylnaltrexoneMethylnaltrexone bromide 150 mg extended release capsule equivalent to 122 mg methylnaltrexone (hard gelatine capsule containing multiple MNTX-ER micro tablets)

Timeline

Start date
2011-05-01
Primary completion
2011-07-01
Completion
2012-01-01
First posted
2012-05-11
Last updated
2012-05-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01596764. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.