close

Clinical Trials

Date: 2011-04-11

Type of information:

phase: 1

Announcement: results

Company: Diamyd (Sweden)

Product: NP2 Enkephalin

Action mechanism: gene therapy

Disease: intractable cancer pain

Therapeutic area: Cancer - Oncology - CNS diseases

Country:

Trial details:

Latest news: The publication, entitled "Gene Therapy for Pain: Results of a Phase I Clinical Trial" details the results of Diamyd's Phase I dose-escalation clinical trial of NP2 Enkephalin through the four month evaluation period. The paper is accepted for publication in the medical journal Annals of Neurology and is available online as a pre-print. The study was designed to provide an assessment of the safety of three different doses of NP2 Enkephalin and also to investigate efficacy measurements of pain relief in subjects suffering from chronic pain due to malignancy. Substantial and sustained pain relief was noted in the middle and high dose cohorts in both pain measurement methods used in the study; the numeric rating scale (NRS) which is a scale of 0-10 and the Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire (SF-MPQ) which is a quantitative compilation of 15 descriptive pain measures. In the highest dose cohort, an ~80% decrease in the combined average weekly NRS scores was observed over the first four weeks.

Ten subjects with moderate to severe cancer pain, despite treatment with the maximum tolerated dosages of standard opioid medications, were enrolled into the study. Safety evaluation of patients through four months indicates that delivery into the skin of NP2 Enkephalin is well tolerated with no observed treatment related serious adverse events.

Results are to be confirmed in an ongoing Phase II, randomized, double blind, placebo controlled clinical trial of NP2 Enkephalin in 32 patients with severe intractable cancer pain at approximately 10 clinical sites in the US. This study is currently enrolling participants.

The results of the NP2 Enkephalin Phase I clinical trial will also be presented at the 63rd Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, 9th - 16th of April 2011 in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.

Is general: Yes