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Title: A novel 12-week study, with three randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled periods to evaluate fentanyl buccal tablets for the relief of breakthrough pain in opioid-tolerant patients with noncancer-related chronic pain. Author: Farrar JT, Messina J, Xie F, Portenoy RK. Journal: Pain Med; 2010 Sep; 11(9):1313-27. PubMed ID: 20807345. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the time of onset, overall efficacy, and safety of fentanyl buccal tablet (FBT) for noncancer-related breakthrough pain (BTP) in opioid-tolerant adults over 12 weeks. DESIGN: A novel 12-week study that mimicked clinical practice with dose titration to effective dose, open-label treatment, and three randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple-crossover periods at weeks 4, 8, and 12. For each double-blind period, study patients received nine doses (FBT = 6, placebo = 3) in a randomized sequence. SETTING: Twenty-one study centers in the United States. POPULATION: Opioid-tolerant adults with noncancer-related chronic pain and BTP. OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was the sum of the pain intensity differences (PID) 5-60 minutes post dose (SPID₆₀) during the final double-blind period. Secondary outcomes included pain relief (PR), meaningful PR, and proportion of episodes with a PID of ≥33% and ≥50%. RESULTS: Of 148 patients who entered the titration phase, 105 (71%) achieved a successful dose and 81 (55%) participated in all three assessment periods in the study. The final RCT assessment period results demonstrated continued efficacy of FBT vs placebo (P < 0.05) for SPID₆₀ (mean [SD]: 7.7 [6.2] vs 4.6 [4.7]). The average onset of PR began at 5 minutes, with meaningful PR by ≤10 minutes. The proportion of episodes with ≥33% improvement in PI was 7% with FBT vs 3% with placebo at 5 minutes and with ≥50% was 17% vs 10% at 15 minutes. All periods showed similar results. Adverse events and patient discontinuations were generally typical of clinical opioid use. CONCLUSIONS: FBT showed continued clinically important analgesic effects and was generally well tolerated over 12 weeks of treatment.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]