Litcius/Paper detail

Lubiprostone for Pediatric Functional Constipation: Randomized, Controlled, Double-Blind Study With Long-term Extension

Marc A. Benninga, Sunny Z. Hussain, Manu R. Sood, Samuel Nurko, Paul E. Hyman, Robert Clifford, Molly O’Gorman, Taryn Losch‐Beridon, Shadreck M. Mareya, Peter Lichtlen, Carlo Di Lorenzo

2021Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Pediatric functional constipation (PFC) is a common problem in children that causes distress and presents treatment challenges to health care professionals. We conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled trial (study 1) in patients with PFC (6-17 years of age) to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lubiprostone, followed by an open-label extension for those who completed the placebo-controlled phase (study 2). METHODS: Study 1 (NCT02042183) was a phase 3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 12-week study evaluating the efficacy and safety of lubiprostone 12 μg twice daily (BID) and 24 μg BID. Study 2 (NCT02138136) was a phase 3, long-term, open-label extension of study 1. In both studies, lubiprostone doses were based on patients' weight. Efficacy was assessed solely based on study 1, with a primary endpoint of overall spontaneous bowel movement (SBM) response (increase of ≥1 SBM/wk vs baseline and ≥3 SBMs/wk for ≥9 weeks, including 3 of the final 4 weeks). RESULTS: 606 patients were randomized to treatment (placebo: n = 202; lubiprostone: n = 404) in study 1. No statistically significant difference in overall SBM response rate was observed between the lubiprostone and placebo groups (18.5% vs 14.4%; P = .2245). Both the 12-μg BID and 24-μg BID doses of lubiprostone were well tolerated in the double-blind and extension phases, with a safety profile consistent with that seen in adult studies. CONCLUSIONS: Lubiprostone did not demonstrate statistically significant effectiveness over placebo in children and adolescents with PFC but did demonstrate a safety profile similar to that in adults. (ClinicalTrials.gov: Number: NCT02042183; Number: NCT02138136).

Topics & Concepts

LubiprostoneMedicineDouble blindRandomized controlled trialFunctional constipationConstipationExtension (predicate logic)Term (time)Internal medicineChronic constipationPlaceboAlternative medicinePathologyProgramming languageQuantum mechanicsComputer sciencePhysicsGastrointestinal motility and disordersInfant Health and DevelopmentCongenital gastrointestinal and neural anomalies