NGX-4010, a capsaicin 8% dermal patch, administered alone or in combination with systemic neuropathic pain medications, reduces pain in patients with postherpetic neuralgia.
Clin J Pain. 2012 Feb; 28(2):101-7.CJ

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Analyses of integrated data from 4 controlled postherpetic neuralgia studies evaluated the effect of NGX-4010, a capsaicin 8% patch, administered alone or together with systemic neuropathic pain medications.

METHODS

Patients recorded their “average pain for the past 24 hours” daily for 12 weeks using an 11-point Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS). Efficacy assessment included the percentage NPRS score reduction from baseline during weeks 2 to 8 and 2 to 12, the proportion of patients responding during weeks 2 to 8 and 2 to 12 and the Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) at weeks 8 and 12.

RESULTS

During the studies, 302 NGX-4010 and 250 control (capsaicin, 0.04% wt/wt) patients were using at least 1 systemic neuropathic pain medication; 295 NGX-4010 and 280 control patients were not. During weeks 2 to 8, NGX-4010 patients reported greater reductions in NPRS scores compared with control both in patients using systemic neuropathic pain medications (26.1% vs. 18.1%, P=0.0011) and in patients not using these medications (36.5% vs. 26.2%, P=0.0002). Patients not using systemic neuropathic pain medications reported a greater reduction in pain compared with patients using these medications in both, NGX-4010 and control groups, resulting in comparable treatment differences between NGX-4010 and control regardless of systemic neuropathic pain medication use. Similar results were seen during weeks 2 to 12, for the responder and PGIC analyses. Transient, capsaicin-related application site reactions were the most common adverse events and not affected by systemic neuropathic pain medication use.

CONCLUSION

A single 60-minute NGX-4010 treatment reduces PHN for up to 12 weeks regardless of concomitant systemic neuropathic pain medication use.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Irving G
Swedish Pain Center, Seattle, WA, USA.
Backonja M
No affiliation info available
Rauck R
No affiliation info available
Webster LR
No affiliation info available
Tobias JK
No affiliation info available
Vanhove GF
No affiliation info available

MeSH

Administration, CutaneousAgedAnalgesicsCapsaicinDrug Therapy, CombinationFemaleHumansMaleNeuralgia, PostherpeticPain MeasurementPrevalenceRisk AssessmentRisk FactorsTreatment OutcomeUnited States

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Meta-Analysis
Randomized Controlled Trial
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21753727