Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain

Michael A Ueberall,1 Stefan Lorenzl,2 Eberhard A Lux,3,4 Raymond Voltz,5 Michael Perelman6 1Institute of Neurological Sciences, Nuremberg, Germany; 2Institute of Nursing Science and Practice, Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria; 3Faculty of Medicine, Witten/Herdecke...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ueberall MA, Lorenzl S, Lux EA, Voltz R, Perelman M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2016-08-01
Series:Journal of Pain Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/efficacy-safety-and-tolerability-of-fentanyl-pectin-nasal-spray-in-pat-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
id doaj-34695173e8e34e29b5b06105cc29a37b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-34695173e8e34e29b5b06105cc29a37b2020-11-25T01:23:42ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Pain Research1178-70902016-08-01Volume 957158528457Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer painUeberall MALorenzl SLux EAVoltz RPerelman MMichael A Ueberall,1 Stefan Lorenzl,2 Eberhard A Lux,3,4 Raymond Voltz,5 Michael Perelman6 1Institute of Neurological Sciences, Nuremberg, Germany; 2Institute of Nursing Science and Practice, Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria; 3Faculty of Medicine, Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany; 4Clinic for Pain and Palliative Care Medicine, St.- Marien-Hospital, Luenen, Germany; 5Department of Palliative Medicine, University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany; 6Archimedes Development Ltd., Nottingham, United Kingdom Objective: Assessment of analgesic effectiveness, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray (FPNS) in the treatment of breakthrough cancer pain (BTcP) in routine clinical practice.Methods: A prospective, open-label, noninterventional study (4-week observation period, 3 month follow-up) of opioid-tolerant adults with BTcP in 41 pain and palliative care centers in Germany. Standardized BTcP questionnaires and patient diaries were used. Evaluation was made of patient-reported outcomes with respect to “time to first effect”, “time to maximum effect”, BTcP relief, as well as changes in BTcP-related impairment of daily life activities, ­quality-of-life restrictions, and health care resource utilization.Results: A total of 235 patients were recruited of whom 220 completed all questionnaires and reported on 1,569 BTcP episodes. Patients reported a significant reduction of maximum BTcP intensity (11-stage numerical rating scale [0= no pain, 10= worst pain conceivable]) with FPNS (mean ± standard deviation = 2.8±2.3) compared with either that reported at baseline (8.5±1.5), experienced immediately before FPNS application (7.4±1.7), or that achieved with previous BTcP medication (6.0±2.0; P<0.001 for each comparison). In 12.3% of BTcP episodes, onset of pain relief occurred ≤2 minutes and in 48.4% ≤5 minutes; maximum effects were reported within 10 minutes for 37.9% and within 15 minutes for 79.4%. By the end of the study, there had been significant improvements versus baseline in BTcP-related daily life activities (28.3±16.9 vs 53.1±11.9), physical (35.9±8.4 vs 26.8±6.5), and mental quality of life (38.7±8.5 vs 29.9±7.9) (P<0.001 for each comparison vs baseline); in addition, health care resource utilization requirements directly related to BTcP were reduced by 67.5%. FPNS was well tolerated; seven patients (3.2%) experienced eight treatment-emergent adverse events of which none was serious. There were no indicators of misuse or abuse.Conclusion: FPNS provided rapid and highly effective BTcP relief in opioid-tolerant cancer patients with substantial improvements in daily functioning and quality of life. FPNS was well tolerated and associated with significant reductions in health care resource utilization and nursing assistance. Keywords: breakthrough pain, cancer, fentanyl pectin nasal spray, intranasal administration, efficacy, safety, quality of lifehttps://www.dovepress.com/efficacy-safety-and-tolerability-of-fentanyl-pectin-nasal-spray-in-pat-peer-reviewed-article-JPRbreakthrough paincancerfentanyl pectin nasal sprayintranasal administrationefficacysafetyquality of life
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ueberall MA
Lorenzl S
Lux EA
Voltz R
Perelman M
spellingShingle Ueberall MA
Lorenzl S
Lux EA
Voltz R
Perelman M
Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
Journal of Pain Research
breakthrough pain
cancer
fentanyl pectin nasal spray
intranasal administration
efficacy
safety
quality of life
author_facet Ueberall MA
Lorenzl S
Lux EA
Voltz R
Perelman M
author_sort Ueberall MA
title Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
title_short Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
title_full Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
title_fullStr Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
title_sort efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray in patients with breakthrough cancer pain
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Journal of Pain Research
issn 1178-7090
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Michael A Ueberall,1 Stefan Lorenzl,2 Eberhard A Lux,3,4 Raymond Voltz,5 Michael Perelman6 1Institute of Neurological Sciences, Nuremberg, Germany; 2Institute of Nursing Science and Practice, Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria; 3Faculty of Medicine, Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany; 4Clinic for Pain and Palliative Care Medicine, St.- Marien-Hospital, Luenen, Germany; 5Department of Palliative Medicine, University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany; 6Archimedes Development Ltd., Nottingham, United Kingdom Objective: Assessment of analgesic effectiveness, safety, and tolerability of fentanyl pectin nasal spray (FPNS) in the treatment of breakthrough cancer pain (BTcP) in routine clinical practice.Methods: A prospective, open-label, noninterventional study (4-week observation period, 3 month follow-up) of opioid-tolerant adults with BTcP in 41 pain and palliative care centers in Germany. Standardized BTcP questionnaires and patient diaries were used. Evaluation was made of patient-reported outcomes with respect to “time to first effect”, “time to maximum effect”, BTcP relief, as well as changes in BTcP-related impairment of daily life activities, ­quality-of-life restrictions, and health care resource utilization.Results: A total of 235 patients were recruited of whom 220 completed all questionnaires and reported on 1,569 BTcP episodes. Patients reported a significant reduction of maximum BTcP intensity (11-stage numerical rating scale [0= no pain, 10= worst pain conceivable]) with FPNS (mean ± standard deviation = 2.8±2.3) compared with either that reported at baseline (8.5±1.5), experienced immediately before FPNS application (7.4±1.7), or that achieved with previous BTcP medication (6.0±2.0; P<0.001 for each comparison). In 12.3% of BTcP episodes, onset of pain relief occurred ≤2 minutes and in 48.4% ≤5 minutes; maximum effects were reported within 10 minutes for 37.9% and within 15 minutes for 79.4%. By the end of the study, there had been significant improvements versus baseline in BTcP-related daily life activities (28.3±16.9 vs 53.1±11.9), physical (35.9±8.4 vs 26.8±6.5), and mental quality of life (38.7±8.5 vs 29.9±7.9) (P<0.001 for each comparison vs baseline); in addition, health care resource utilization requirements directly related to BTcP were reduced by 67.5%. FPNS was well tolerated; seven patients (3.2%) experienced eight treatment-emergent adverse events of which none was serious. There were no indicators of misuse or abuse.Conclusion: FPNS provided rapid and highly effective BTcP relief in opioid-tolerant cancer patients with substantial improvements in daily functioning and quality of life. FPNS was well tolerated and associated with significant reductions in health care resource utilization and nursing assistance. Keywords: breakthrough pain, cancer, fentanyl pectin nasal spray, intranasal administration, efficacy, safety, quality of life
topic breakthrough pain
cancer
fentanyl pectin nasal spray
intranasal administration
efficacy
safety
quality of life
url https://www.dovepress.com/efficacy-safety-and-tolerability-of-fentanyl-pectin-nasal-spray-in-pat-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
work_keys_str_mv AT ueberallma efficacysafetyandtolerabilityoffentanylpectinnasalsprayinpatientswithbreakthroughcancerpain
AT lorenzls efficacysafetyandtolerabilityoffentanylpectinnasalsprayinpatientswithbreakthroughcancerpain
AT luxea efficacysafetyandtolerabilityoffentanylpectinnasalsprayinpatientswithbreakthroughcancerpain
AT voltzr efficacysafetyandtolerabilityoffentanylpectinnasalsprayinpatientswithbreakthroughcancerpain
AT perelmanm efficacysafetyandtolerabilityoffentanylpectinnasalsprayinpatientswithbreakthroughcancerpain
_version_ 1725120485814960128