Fulranumab for treatment of diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain: A randomized controlled trial.

Journal: Neurology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To assess efficacy and safety of fulranumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody against nerve growth factor, in patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain (DPNP).

Methods: In this phase II, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, patients with moderate to severe DPNP were randomized to treatments with fulranumab (1, 3, or 10 mg) or placebo administered subcutaneously every 4 weeks.

Results: Because of early study termination (clinical hold) by the US Food and Drug Administration, 77 (intent-to-treat) of the planned 200 patients were enrolled. The primary endpoint, the mean reduction of average daily pain at week 12 compared with baseline, showed a positive dose-response relationship (p = 0.014, 1-sided); the pair-wise comparison between the 10-mg group and placebo was significant (unadjusted p = 0.040, 2-sided). An exploratory responder analysis revealed that a greater proportion of patients in the 10-mg group reported ≥30% reduction in the average DPNP intensity compared with placebo at week 12 (p = 0.006). Although not statistically significant, several secondary endpoints showed directionally similar results to the primary efficacy dose-response relationship. During the combined efficacy and safety extension phases, the top 3 treatment-emergent adverse events in the combined fulranumab group were arthralgia (11%), edema peripheral (11%), and diarrhea (9%). No cases of joint replacement or death were reported.

Conclusions: Despite early study termination, fulranumab treatment resulted in dose-dependent efficacy and was generally well tolerated. Methods: This study provides Class I evidence that in patients with DPNP, fulranumab 10 mg reduces pain by 1.2 points on an 11-point scale compared with placebo.

Authors
Hao Wang, Gary Romano, Mary Frustaci, Norm Bohidar, Huizhong Ma, Panna Sanga, Seth Ness, Lucille Russell, Margaret Fedgchin, Kathleen Kelly, John Thipphawong
Relevant Conditions

Neuralgia