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About
VVZ-149 is a novel analgesic drug candidate that shows a potential analgesic activity inhibiting GlyT2 and 5HT2A simultaneously. These target receptors have been known to play important roles in induction and transmission of pain signals. There have been many efforts to develop selective drugs to treat pain, but usually unsuccessful due to the lack of efficacy or limitations of single-target approach for new drug discovery. VVZ-149 is expected to be a dual-target drug, demonstrated having a potential synergism between GlyT2 and 5HT2A to maximize an antinociceptive effect in the in vivo animal models. In Phase 1 conducted among healthy subjects, safety and tolerability were confirmed. Phase 2 was designed as a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the analgesic drug VVZ-149 injection.
Full description
VVZ-149 is a dual antagonist of GlyT2 and 5HT2A. GlyT2 blockage increases inhibitory synaptic transmission by glycine in the spinal cord, resulting in a reduction of pain transmissions to the brain. 5HT2A blockage decreases descending serotonergic facilitatory modulation on pain transmission by the brain and reduces nociceptor activation in peripheral nerves, which are primary sources of pain in post-surgical pain. VVZ-149 has been shown to have comparable efficacy to morphine in well controlled (blind, complete randomization with a positive control) animal studies using rat models of post-operative pain and formalin-induced pain. The PK/PD study in animals indicates that therapeutic plasma concentration in human subjects will be 600-1,900 ng/ml. A clinical Phase 1 study performed in healthy subjects has shown no clinically significant adverse events up to a plasma concentration level of 3,261 ng/ml other than brief symptoms of mild nausea or dizziness, and mild somnolence when the plasma exposure level is more than 2,000 ng/ml.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
< Surgical Factors >
Emergency or unplanned surgery.
Repeat operation (e.g., previous surgery within 30 days for same condition).
Cancer-related condition causing preoperative pain in site of surgery.
< Subject Characteristics >
Women with childbearing potential, Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding.
Chronic pain diagnosis (e.g., ongoing pain at baseline with NRS ≥ 4/10).
Unstable or poorly controlled psychiatric condition (e.g., untreated PTSD, anxiety, or depression). Subjects who take stable doses (same dose >30 days) of antidepressants and anti-anxiety drugs may be included.
Unstable or acute medical condition (e.g., unstable angina, congestive heart failure, renal failure, hepatic failure, AIDS).
Subjects who have long PR (>200msec) or prolonged QTc (> 450msec) at Screening
< Drug, Alcohol, and Pharmacological Considerations >
History of alcohol, opiate or other drug abuse or dependence within 12 months prior to Screening .
Ongoing or recent (within 30 days prior to surgery) use of steroids, opioids, or antipsychotics.
Alcohol consumption within 24 hours of surgery.
Use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or acetaminophen within 24 hours of surgery.
Use of herbal agents or nutraceuticals (i.e., chaparral, comfrey, germander, jin bu huan, kava, pennyroyal, skullcap, St. John's wort, or valerian) within 7 days prior to surgery.
< Anesthetic and Other Exclusion Considerations >
Use of neuraxial or regional anesthesia related to the surgery.
Use of ketamine, gabapentin, pregabalin, or lidocaine (>1 mg/kg) intra or peri-operatively, or within 24 hours of surgery.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
38 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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