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Fentanyl Pectin Nasal Spray for Breakthrough Cancer Pain

44

Citations

28

References

2012

Year

Abstract

Abstract Fentanyl pectin nasal spray (FPNS) is being developed to improve analgesic onset, treatment efficacy, and satisfaction/acceptability in treating breakthrough cancer pain (BTCP). Patients (n = 114) were entered into a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicenter study. Patients who successfully titrated (n = 83) entered a double-blind phase; 10 episodes of BTCP were treated with the effective dose (7) or placebo (3). Pain intensity (11-point scale) and pain relief (5-point scale) were assessed between 5 and 60 minutes. Use of rescue medications was recorded, and acceptability assessments were conducted 30 and 60 minutes post dose. Only 6% of patients failed to titrate to an effective dose of FPNS due to lack of efficacy and 5% due to adverse events. A total of 91% of randomized patients completed the study. Episode analysis (FPNS, n = 459; placebo, n = 200) revealed that compared with placebo, 33% of FPNS episodes showed an onset of improvement in pain intensity at 5 minutes (P < 0.05); 33% of episodes by 10 minutes had clinically meaningful pain relief (> or = 2 point decrease in pain intensity; P < 0.0001). Satisfaction with the convenience and ease of use of FPNS was reported by 70% and 68% of patients, respectively; 87% of patients elected to continue treatment post study. FPNS provided rapid analgesia in BTCP and was well accepted by patients.

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