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Ondansetron, also known as Zofran, is a marketed compound used for the prevention of nausea and vomiting. This study, called a thorough QT study, will characterize the effects of a single intravenous (IV) dose of ondansetron on cardiac repolarization as compared to placebo. Moxifloxacin, a commercially available antibiotic known to cause a mild QT prolongation, will be used as a positive control and will be given orally. The cardiac repolarization will be measured by taking consecutive ECGs on a recording device known as a Holter monitor and measuring the QT interval at specified times. In addition, blood samples will also be taken at specified times and will be used to measure the amount of study medication in the body.
Full description
Ondansetron was first approved in 1991 for treatment of nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy and surgical procedures and as ondansetron was developed prior to current regulatory requirements, a formal, thorough QT study has not been performed for this compound. The purpose of this study is to further define the safety of ondansetron as some effects on QT interval prolongation have been observed for this and other members of the 5-HT3 inhibitor class of compounds. In the case of ondansetron, these effects have been rare and transient and noted primarily with IV administration, however, the extent to which ondansetron prolongs the QT interval has not been defined.
This study will quantify the effects of a single dose of IV ondansetron administered over 15 minutes on cardiac conduction in a double-blind, cross-over study and compared to placebo and a positive control, oral moxifloxacin. Pre- and post-dose digital electrocardiograms (ECGs) will be obtained by continuous Holter monitoring (1000 Hz) for blinded over-read by a third party vendor. This double-blind study will randomize approximately 60 healthy adult male and female volunteers to one of 12 sequences each consisting of 4 study treatment periods in a crossover design with a 7-day washout between each treatment period. Subjects will receive placebo, moxifloxacin (single 400 mg tablet), ondansetron 8 mg, and ondansetron 32 mg based on the randomized sequence. Both ondansetron and the placebo for ondansetron will be administered intravenously over 15 minutes. Moxifloxacin, a drug known to cause mild QTc prolongation, is included as a positive control and will be dosed as open label. Serial blood samples will be obtained to determine ondansetron and, if needed, moxifloxacin pharmacokinetic parameters. Safety and tolerability will be assessed through physical exams, adverse events, concurrent medications, clinical laboratory tests and vital signs.
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Inclusion criteria
If a female is of child-bearing potential, has a negative serum pregnancy test at Screening, and agrees to or has undergone one of the following: Complete abstinence from sexual intercourse from 2 weeks prior to administration of the study drug until completion of the follow-up procedures, or, bilateral tubal ligation, or have a vasectomized partner or use an intrauterine device with published data showing that expected failure rate is less than 1% per year (e.g., GynaeFix) from 2 weeks prior to administration of study drug until completion of the follow-up procedures, or, use double-barrier method [condom or occlusive cap (diaphragm or cervical/vault caps) used with spermicidal foam/gel/cream/suppository].
Exclusion criteria
QTc interval > 450 msec; PR interval > 240 msec or less than or equal to 110 msec; evidence of second- or third-degree atrioventricular (AV) block; pathological Q-waves (defined as Q-wave > 40 msec or depth greater than 0.4 - 0.5 mV); evidence of ventricular pre-excitation; electrocardiographic evidence of complete left bundle branch block, right bundle branch block (RBBB), incomplete LBBB; intraventricular conduction delay with QRS duration > 120 msec; bradycardia as defined by sinus rate < 50 bpm.
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60 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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