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About
Vulvodynia is characterized by persistent vulvar pain, which often occurs upon touch or pressure. The cause of vulvodynia is unknown but is presumed to involve many factors. Some of these factors may include altered immune response, infections, altered vaginal acid-base balance, allergic reactions and psychosexual disorders. Women are generally treated with medications such as anti-histamines, anti-depressants and anti-inflammatories, or with physical therapy to minimize symptoms. Other therapies for vulvodynia include topical agents (lidocaine, or compounded medications such as baclofen, gabapentin and amitriptyline), oral medications (gabapentin, pregabalin, calcium citrate), complementary therapies (yoga, guided imagery, cognitive behavioral therapy) or a low-oxalate diet, but these are often ineffective. Surgery for vulvodynia may be helpful in the hard to manage cases, but is utilized as a last resort.
Full description
CC-10004 is a well-tolerated, selective PDE4 inhibitor with a demonstrated inhibitory effect on inflammatory mediators and is under development for the treatment of inflammatory and immune mediated conditions.
This is an open-label, one arm, phase II study at William Beaumont Hospital. Twenty female subjects aged 18 or older meeting criteria for diagnosis of vulvodynia or vulvar vestibulitis (vestibulodynia) will be treated with CC-10004 at 20mg orally twice a day for 12 weeks.The patient will be seen for a total of ten visits by the study coordinator.
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Inclusion criteria
Participant must understand and voluntarily sign and date the appropriate Informed Consent document.
Female who is ≥ 18 years of age and <70 years of age.
Participant must be able to adhere to the study visit schedule and other protocol requirements.
Participant must have vulvodynia--vulvar pain at 2 or more sites tested of at least 3 or greater on a 0-10 Likert scale.
Subject -reported vulvar pain for at least 3 months prior to enrollment.
Participant who is currently taking narcotics for pelvic pain must be on a stable regimen for 3 months prior to enrollment in the study.
Females of childbearing potential (FCBP) must have a negative urine pregnancy test at screening/baseline (Visit 1). In addition, sexually active FCBP must agree to use TWO of the following adequate forms of contraception while on study medication: oral, injectable, or implantable hormonal contraceptives; tubal ligation; intrauterine device; barrier contraceptive with spermicide; or vasectomized partner. A FCBP must agree to have pregnancy tests every 28 days while on study medication.
Subject must meet the following laboratory criteria:
Exclusion criteria
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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