Publications by authors named "P D Goldenheim"

Two separate trials compared controlled-release (CR) oral oxycodone (administered every 12 hours) with immediate-release (IR) oxycodone (4 times a day) to determine whether patients with chronic pain could be titrated to stable pain control as readily with the CR as with the IR formulation. In one study, 48 patients with cancer pain were randomized to open-label titration with either CR or IR oxycodone (maximum dose, 400 mg/day) for a period of up to 21 days. In a study of similar design, 57 patients with low back pain were titrated with either CR or IR oxycodone (maximum dose, 80 mg/day) for a period of up to 10 days.

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The efficacy and safety of graded doses (10, 20, and 30 mg) of controlled-release (CR) oxycodone was compared with that of immediate-release (IR) oxycodone (15 mg), immediate-release oxycodone 10 mg in combination with acetaminophen 650 mg (APAP), and placebo in a single-dose, double-blind, randomized, parallel-group study. The participants, 182 inpatients experiencing moderate to severe pain after abdominal or gynecologic surgery, provided hourly ratings of pain intensity and relief for 12 hours after administration. All active treatments were significantly superior to placebo for many hourly measurements and for the sum of pain intensity differences (SPID) and total pain relief (TOTPAR).

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Plasma concentrations of oxycodone, oxymorphone, and noroxycodone were determined after administration of 20 mg oral controlled-release oxycodone tablets to four subject groups: young (aged 21 to 45 years) men, elderly (aged 65 to 79 years) men, young women, and elderly women. Area under the oxycodone and noroxycodone concentration-time curve (AUC) values were comparable among the four groups. Compared with oxycodone, the oxymorphone AUC values were small, with significant differences between subject groups.

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The effect of naltrexone hydrochloride on the bioavailability of 60 mg controlled-release oral morphine sulfate in normal volunteers was determined using a randomized, 2-way crossover, analytically blinded study design. Although naltrexone did not qualitatively alter the concentration-time curve for controlled-release morphine, the area under the plasma morphine concentration-time curve from 0-24 h (AUC0-24) was significantly greater (p < 0.01) for morphine given with naltrexone (265 ng x h/ml) than for morphine given alone (215 ng x h/ml).

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Twenty-three normal volunteers who received morphine sulphate (MS Contin) with naltrexone completed this randomized, analytically blinded, two-way crossover comparison of the bioavailability of one 200-mg oral controlled-release morphine sulfate tablet with two 100-mg MSC tablets. Morphine effects were blocked by three 100-mg doses of naltrexone. The first dose of naltrexone was given 24 hours before MSC dosing, followed by a second dose at the time of MSC dosing and a third dose 24 hours after MSC administration.

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