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Researchers say Agent provides treatment
option for Women with Hot Flashes
Newswise — A pill used for nerve pain offers
women relief from hot flashes, Mayo Clinic
researchers report at the 45th Annual
Meeting of the
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO).
They say the agent, pregabalin, decreased
hot flash severity and frequency about 20
percent more than did a placebo agent. Thus,
pregabalin appears to offer about the same
benefit as gabapentin, an older, related
drug, as well as newer classes of
antidepressants.
“Hot flashes are a major problem in many
women, and for those who opt not to take
hormonal therapies or antidepressants,
pregabalin appears to be another treatment
option,” says the study’s lead author,
Charles Loprinzi, M.D., a medical
oncologist at the
Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.
While pregabalin offers about the same
benefit as gabapentin, women who use it only
need to take two pills a day, versus three
for gabapentin, he says. Side effects can
occur with the use of either drug.
However, in this study, they were not severe
enough that participants stopped using the
active study drug any more often than did
patients who were taking placebos,
researchers say.
Dr. Loprinzi has pioneered the field of
nonhormonal hot flash therapy, which he
began researching decades ago to help breast
cancer patients using tamoxifen, an
anti-estrogen treatment that creates
symptoms of menopause.
He is the first researcher to test the use
of antidepressants, compared to placebo
treatment, for hot flashes.
Gabapentin, an agent that has long been on
the market to treat pain caused from injury
to nerves, has been shown to decrease hot
flashes more than do placebos.
This drug is approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) to treat diabetic
peripheral neuropathy and for shingles;
anecdotal evidence suggested that menopausal
women who used it had a reduction in hot
flashes, Dr. Loprinzi says.
Multiple placebo-controlled studies have
since demonstrated that this drug decreases
hot flashes.
Gabapentin and a variety of antidepressants
are now commonly prescribed for treatment of
hot flashes, although these agents are not
specifically approved by the FDA for such
use.
Pregabalin is a newer version of gabapentin.
“We thought it might also relieve hot
flashes and thus was worth testing,” Dr.
Loprinzi says.
So, using funds from the National Cancer
Institute, Dr. Loprinzi and colleagues set
up a 207-participant study conducted by the
North Central Cancer Treatment Group (NCCTG).
The study was a Phase III double-blinded,
placebo-controlled randomized trial, testing
three different treatment arms: a placebo
versus daily doses of 150 milligrams (mg) of
pregabalin (75 mg twice a day) and 300
milligrams (150 mg twice a day).
Patients
getting pregabalin started off with lower
doses which were increased weekly to the
eventual full dose.
Participants, who reported having at least
28 hot flashes a week, kept a “hot flash
diary” in which they recorded the number and
severity of hot flashes they had each day
while taking their study drug — the content
of which was unknown to them.
In the study group, 34 percent were using
anti-estrogen therapy — either an aromatase
inhibitor, raloxifene, or tamoxifen — to
help prevent the recurrence of
estrogen-sensitive breast cancer.
The researchers found that for the 163
patients for whom information was available,
both doses of pregabalin reduced hot flashes
to about the same degree, but that
toxicities, such as cognitive dysfunction,
were increased at the higher dose.
Other reported side effects included weight
gain, sleepiness, dizziness, coordination
troubles, concentration troubles, and
concerns regarding vision changes.
They found that, after six weeks of
treatment, women using a placebo agent
reported about a 50 percent decrease in
their hot flash score (severity), but the
change was greater for those who used a
75-milligram twice daily dose of pregabalin
(65 percent decrease) and a 150-milligram
twice daily dose (71 percent decrease).
The declines in hot flash frequency were 36
percent for placebo users, 58 percent in
women who used lower-dose pregabalin, and 61
percent in women given the higher dose.
“All in all, this study demonstrates that we
have another agent to add to the list of
medications that offer benefit against hot
flashes, even in women using anti-estrogen
therapies,” Dr. Loprinzi says.
Pfizer, the company that manufactures
pregabalin, donated both the drug and
placebo tablets for this study.
About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is the first and largest
integrated, not-for-profit group practice in
the world. Doctors from every medical
specialty work together to care for
patients, joined by common systems and a
philosophy of “the needs of the patient come
first.”
More than 3,300 physicians, scientists and
researchers and 46,000 allied health staff
work at Mayo Clinic, which has sites in
Rochester, Minn., Jacksonville, Fla., and
Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz. Collectively, the
three locations treat more than half a
million people each year. To obtain the
latest news releases from Mayo Clinic, go to
www.mayoclinic.org/news.
For information about research and
education, visit
www.mayo.edu. MayoClinic.com (www.mayoclinic.com)
is available as a resource for your health
stories.
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