Phase 4
Completed N=11
An Open-Label Extension Study Of Lamotrigine In Subjects With Bipolar Disorder
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00360126 ↗Enrolled (actual)
11
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Mar 2017
Primary outcomePrimary: Number of Participants With Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) — 0 Participants
◆ Published Evidence
No publication linked
No peer-reviewed publication reporting this trial's results has been linked yet. This can indicate results are unpublished — a known publication-bias signal. We re-check periodically.
Summary
The precursor study (SCA101469) was an open-label, prospective multicentre study in adult subjects diagnosed with bipolar disorder consisting of 36 weeks treatment with lamotrigine. The current study is to provide 12 months post study access to open-label lamotrigine for participants of the SCA101469 study.
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Number of Participants With Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) |
— | — |
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
A subject will be eligible for inclusion in this study only if all of the following criteria apply:
- completed 32 weeks of open label treatment in study SCA101469 and, in the investigators opinion, has responded to lamotrigine therapy
- male or female subject
A female is eligible to enter and participate in this study if she is of:
- non-childbearing potential (i.e., physiologically incapable of becoming pregnant, including any female who is post-menopausal or sterilised) or,
- child-bearing potential, has a negative urine pregnancy test at screening, and agrees to one of the following contraceptive methods:
- Complete abstinence from intercourse from 2 weeks prior to administration of the study drug, throughout the study, and for a time interval after completion of premature discontinuation from the study to account for elimination of the investigational drug (a minimum of 5 half-lives or longer if the pharmacodynamic profile of the investigational drug warrants a longer time period); or,
- Sterilisation of male partner; or,
- Implants of levonorgestrel; or,
- Injectable progestogen; or,
- Oral contraceptive (combined or progestogen only); or,
- Any intrauterine device (IUD) with published data showing that the lowest expected failure rate is less than 1% per year (not all IUDs meet this criterion); or,
- Any other methods with published data showing that the lowest expected failure rate for that method is less than 1% per year; or,
- Barrier method only if used in combination with any of the above acceptable methods.
- willing and able to give written informed consent to participate in the study.
Exclusion Criteria
A subject will not be eligible for inclusion in this study if any of the following criteria apply:
- subject experienced a 'mood episode' during participation in study SCA101469, or since completing participation in study SCA101469.
- participation in a clinical drug trial other than SCA101469 within the past 30 days or previous participation in this clinical study
- known hypersensitivity to lamotrigine
- in the investigator's judgement, the subject poses a current serious suicidal or homicidal risk, or has made a suicide attempt within the past 6 months.
- combination of carbamazepine and valproate
- concurrent lamotrigine therapy, other than that commenced in study SCA101469
- current or history of substance abuse
- diagnosis of epilepsy
- diagnosis or history of an obsessive-compulsive disorder, social phobia, or eating disorder
- significant cardiac, renal, cerebrovascular, or hepatic condition; no significant abnormalities in the laboratory tests or ECG recording performed during study SCA101469.
- unable to understand or implement instructions
- unresolved drug related adverse event or serious adverse event occurring in study SCA101469
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00360126). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication. Informational only — not medical advice.