Study identifier:D3820R00008
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier:NCT02813356
EudraCT identifier:N/A
CTIS identifier:N/A
United States Post-Marketing Observational Cardiovascular Safety Study in Patients taking Naloxegol
Opioid induced constipation
N/A
No
naloxegol, non-PAMORA
All
8800
Observational
N/A
Allocation: -
Endpoint Classification: -
Intervention Model: -
Masking: -
Primary Purpose: -
Verified 01 May 2020 by AstraZeneca
AstraZeneca
-
The overall research goal for this study is to provide additional data to characterize the safety of naloxegol in patients aged 18 years and older who do not have a diagnosis of cancer and who are treated with opioids chronically
The primary objective is to assess the overall risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) among naloxegol-treated patients compared to that among patients on prescription non-peripherally acting mu-opioid antagonist (PAMORA) opioid induced constipation (OIC) treatment. The corresponding analysis is of a new-user cohort study that captures the occurrence of MACE in persons receiving naloxegol or comparison medications. The study takes place in actual-use settings in the US in which existing electronic data captures patient diagnoses, health care, and treatment. The occurrence of MACE in naloxegol-treated patients will be compared to the occurrence of MACE in medically-similar new users of other prescription-only treatments for OIC in the same settings, with both naloxegol-treated and comparison medication-treated patients being followed for as long as they continue on therapy. In further pursuit of the primary objective, there will be a self-controlled study that follows all members of the new-user cohorts, including both new naloxegol users and new users of comparator products, for as long as data are available as the patients may go on or off treatment. A self-controlled study offers a complementary approach to the statistical control for the possible confounding effects of personal characteristics. Using the same data sources, this self-controlled design follows individuals from the time they finish their first course of treatment as new users for as long as the study continues. Patient treatment statuses are continuously updated since the treatment choices exercised by patients and their caregivers create extended periods of study time on and off naloxegol and possibly on and off other therapies for OIC. Comparisons of the occurrence of MACE occur within individuals and so are unaffected by differences between individuals, as in a crossover trial. The first secondary objective is to assess the potential confounding effects of lifestyle risk factors on relative risk of MACE among naloxegol-treated patients compared with that among patients on other prescription non-PAMORA OIC treatment. The corresponding analysis is of a case-control study nested within the primary study population. All of the MACE “cases” will be matched to other members of the cohorts (“controls”). In cases and controls, the outpatient medical record will be abstracted for information on lifestyle risk factors. The case-control analysis will provide information on the presence and effect of lifestyle confounding factors that may be identifiable only by chart review. Further secondary analyses will investigate the relative risks analyzed under an intent-to-treat paradigm over fixed time periods of membership in the naloxegol and comparator cohorts, relative risks for specific components of MACE, relative risks associated with new oral PAMORA agents other than naloxegol (non-naloxegol oral PAMORAs [NNPAMORAs]) that may come onto the US market during the course of the study, and an exploration of the possible variations in risk associated with variations in the dose and timing of naloxegol dispensing in the case-control study.
Location
Location
Wilmington, DE, United States, 19803
Location
Hines, IL, United States, 60141
Arms | Assigned Interventions |
---|---|
naloxegol patients exposed to naloxegol | Drug: naloxegol non-interventional study where naloxegol is prescribed during normal clinical practice |
non-PAMORA patients exposed to non-peripherally acting mu-opioid antagonist | Drug: non-PAMORA non-interventional study where patients are exposed to non-peripherally acting mu-opioid antagonists during the normal course of clinical practice |
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