Objective: To examine the efficacy of duloxetine vs. pregabalin in the treatment for diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain (DPNP), comparing patient subgroups with and without concomitant antidepressant use.
Methods: This post hoc analysis assessed data from a randomized 12-week study that confirmed the noninferiority of duloxetine to pregabalin. In the previously published study, patients with DPNP with inadequate response to gabapentin were switched to duloxetine monotherapy, combination therapy of duloxetine plus gabapentin, or pregabalin monotherapy. Current, stable antidepressant use was allowed; 79 patients were concomitantly treated with antidepressants and 328 without antidepressants. In this post hoc analysis, improvement in the weekly mean of diary-based average daily pain ratings (numerical rating scale: 0-10) in antidepressant users and nonusers was analyzed using a longitudinal mixed-models repeated-measures (MMRM) analysis, including a test of the 3-way interaction (antidepressant subgroup by treatment by week) to assess whether the differences among treatment groups over 12 weeks differ between the antidepressant-use subgroups.
Results: The 3-way interaction was significant (P = 0.035), demonstrating that treatment-group differences in pain reduction over time differ between the subgroups. Among patients without antidepressant use, patients treated with duloxetine had significantly greater pain reduction than pregabalin at Week 4 and at each successive week up to the 12-week endpoint (-2.8 for duloxetine and -2.1 for pregabalin; P = 0.031); patients treated with duloxetine plus gabapentin had greater pain reduction than pregabalin at Weeks 2, 3, 5, and 7 to 9 (P ≤ 0.05) but not at endpoint (-2.4; P = 0.222). Among concomitant antidepressant users, no treatment-group differences were found.
Conclusions: In patients with DPNP inadequately treated with gabapentin without the concomitant use of antidepressants, switching to duloxetine instead of pregabalin may provide better pain reduction. Conversely, in nonresponders to gabapentin who are concomitantly using an antidepressant, switching to duloxetine or pregabalin may provide similar pain reductions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/papr.12121 | DOI Listing |
Rheumatology (Oxford)
December 2024
Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton AB, Canada.
Objectives: To summarise and evaluate Cochrane reviews of pharmacological therapies for adults with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) pain.
Methods: Systematic search of Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews to May 2024. Generic quality assessment used AMSTAR-2 criteria, validity checks of potentially critical factors in evaluation of analgesic efficacy, and assessment of susceptibility of results to publication bias.
Rheumatology (Oxford)
December 2024
Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton AB, Canada.
Objectives: To summarise and evaluate Cochrane reviews of pharmacological therapies for adults with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) pain.
Methods: Systematic search of Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews to May 2024. Generic quality assessment used AMSTAR-2 criteria, validity checks of potentially critical factors in evaluation of analgesic efficacy, and assessment of susceptibility of results to publication bias.
Perspect Clin Res
July 2024
Department of Pharmacology, Smt.NHL MMC, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India.
Purpose: To conduct a network meta-analysis comparing the safety and efficacy of gabapentin (GBP), pregabalin (PGB), oxcarbazepine (OXC), and duloxetine (DLX) in treating diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN).
Materials And Methods: The study's eligibility criteria includee randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with a focus on DPN patients receiving GBP, PGB, DLX, or OXC versus placebo. Noncompliant trials with incomplete information and observational studies were excluded.
Ann Neurosci
May 2024
Department of Pharmacology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Raipur, Chhattisgarh, India.
Background: Peripheral neuropathy is four times more common in geriatric age group patients compared to younger ones. Most of the trials have targeted adult population, and there is scarcity of data in the geriatric age group.
Purpose: A real-world study was planned on geriatric patients suffering from peripheral neuropathy to analyse the effectiveness and safety of first-line drugs used in the management of peripheral neuropathy.
BMC Pharmacol Toxicol
November 2024
The Affiliated Yixing Hospital of Jiangsu University, Yixing, Jiangsu, 214200, China.
Introduction: Drug-induced sarcopenia has not received adequate attention. Meanwhile, there is growing recognition of the importance of effective pharmacovigilance in evaluating the benefits and risks of medications.
Aims: The primary aim of this study is to investigate the potential association between drug use and sarcopenia through an analysis of adverse event reports from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) and to evaluate the genetic factors contributing to drug-induced sarcopenia using summary-data-based Mendelian randomization (SMR).
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