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Phase 4 N=14 Randomized Basic Science

Open Label Study to Assess the Absolute Bioavailability of Tasimelteon (HETLIOZ™)

Non-24-Hour-Sleep-Wake Disorder

Enrolled (actual)
14
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Jul 2016
Primary outcome: Primary: Absolute Bioavailability After a Single Oral Dose of Hetlioz™(Tasimelteon) 20mg — 38.3 Geometric Mean Ratio (%)

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 4
Interventions
tasimelteon 20 mg capsule (Drug); tasimelteon 2 mg I.V. (Drug)
Age
Adult · 18+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
Vanda Pharmaceuticals
Primary completion
May 2014

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Absolute Bioavailability After a Single Oral Dose of Hetlioz™(Tasimelteon) 20mg
38.3
SECONDARY
Cmax of Tasimelteon After a Single 20 mg Oral Dose and After a Single 2 mg I.V. Administration.
260; 82.2
SECONDARY
AUC (Inf) of Tasimelteon After a Single 20 mg Oral Dose and After a Single 2 mg I.V. Administration.
358; 71.6
SECONDARY
T1/2 of Tasimelteon After a Single 20 mg Oral Dose and After a Single 2 mg I.V. Administration.
1.06; 1.02
SECONDARY
Total Clearance of Tasimelteon After a Single 20 mg Oral Dose and After a Single 2 mg I.V. Administration.
2241; 505
SECONDARY
Cmax of Tasimelteon's Metabolites After an Oral and I.V. Dose of Tasimelteon
303; 16.4; 53.2; 3.7; 113; 7.31
SECONDARY
AUC(Inf) of Tasimelteon's Metabolites After a Single Oral and I.V. Dose
400; 30.3; 125; 12.2; 619; 43.8
SECONDARY
Metabolite-to-parent AUC(Inf) Ratios After Oral Administration of a Single 20 mg Dose and IV Administration of a Single 2 mg Dose of Tasimelteon
1.98; 0.39; 0.51; 0.16; 2.04; 0.54
SECONDARY
Number of Participants With Adverse Events
0; 1; 1; 1; 1; 2

Summary

Hetlioz™ (tasimelteon) is used in the treatment of Non-24-Hour-Sleep-Wake Disorder (Non-24). Non-24 is very common in people who are totally blind because light can not reset their body clock. This causes the internal sleep-wake cycle to be out of sync with the 24-hour day-night. Non-24 is a serious, chronic circadian rhythm disorder in the blind that causes nighttime sleep problems and a wide range of daytime difficulties, including an overwhelming urge to nap. Tasimelteon will be given in two ways; orally (by mouth) as a 20 mg capsule and intravenously (I.V.) by infusion through a catheter (not an injection) into a vein. The oral administration is approved by the FDA. The I.V. administration is considered investigational as it has not been approved by the FDA. This will be the first time tasimelteon will be given to humans by intravenous (I.V.) injection. The purposes of this research study are to: * assess how quickly a single 20 mg oral dose of tasimelteon is absorbed into the body; * evaluate the single-dose pharmacokinetics of tasimelteon after a single 20 mg oral dose and after a single 2 mg I.V. dose; * evaluate the single-dose pharmacokinetics of tasimelteon metabolites after a single 20 mg oral dose and after a single 2 mg I.V. dose; * evaluate the safety and tolerability of a single 20 mg oral dose of tasimelteon; and * evaluate the safety and tolerability of a single 2 mg I.V. dose of tasimelteon. Pharmacokinetics (PK) is the study of how a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and eventually eliminated by the body. Pharmacokinetics is what the body does to the drug. Blood samples will be taken throughout the study for PK analysis.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Men and women ages 18 - 55 years, inclusive;
  • Non-smokers [abstinence from smoking for at least 6 months before the screening visit] and test negative for cotinine at screening and baseline;
  • Subjects with Body Mass Index (BMI) of ≥18 and ≤25 kg/m2 (BMI = weight (kg)/ [height (m)]2);
  • Males, non-fecund females (i.e., surgically sterilized, if procedure was done 6 months before screening or subject is postmenopausal, without menses for 6 months before screening), or females of child-bearing potential using an acceptable method of birth control for a period of 35 days before the first dosing, and females must have a negative pregnancy test at the screening and baseline visits; Note 1: Acceptable methods of birth control include any one of the following: abstinence, vasectomized sexual partner, hormonal methods (i.e. pill, hormonal IUD, Depo-Provera, implants, patch, intravaginal device [NuvaRing]), intrauterine device (IUD [copper banded coils]), diaphragm, cervical cap, or condom with spermicidal jelly or foam
  • Vital signs (after 3 minutes resting in a semi-supine position) which are within the ranges shown below:
  • Body temperature between 35.0-37.5 °C;
  • Systolic blood pressure between 90-150 mmHg;
  • Diastolic blood pressure between 50-95 mmHg;
  • Pulse rate between 50-100 bpm.
  • Ability and acceptance to provide written informed consent;
  • Willing and able to comply with study requirements and restrictions;
  • Subjects must be in good health as determined by past medical history, physical examination, electrocardiogram, clinical laboratory tests and urinalysis;

Exclusion Criteria

  • History of recent (within six months) drug or alcohol abuse as defined in DSM-V, Diagnostic Criteria for Drug and Alcohol Abuse or evidence of such abuse as indicated by the laboratory assays conducted during the Screening Visit or at Baseline;
  • Any major surgery within three months of the first Baseline visit or any minor surgery within one month;
  • History or current evidence of cardiovascular, hepatic, hematopoietic, renal, gastrointestinal or metabolic dysfunction or psychiatric disease judged by the Investigator to be clinically significant;
  • Subjects who are currently considered a suicide risk, any subject who has ever made a suicide attempt, or those who are currently demonstrating active (within the past 6 months) suicidal ideation as deemed by the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS);
  • Any condition requiring the regular use of medication except those listed in Section 8.2;
  • Exposure to any investigational drug, including placebo, within 30 days or 5 half-lives (whichever is longer) of baseline
  • Exposure (within 2 weeks of Day -1) to any over-the-counter medications including melatonin, dietary supplements and/or herbal remedies, except those listed on Section 8.2;
  • Treatment with any drug known to cause major organ system toxicity (e.g., chloramphenicol or tamoxifen) during the 60 days preceding the Screening visit;
  • History of intolerance and/or hypersensitivity to tasimelteon, and/or drugs similar to tasimelteon including melatonin;
  • Donation or loss of 400 mL or more of blood within one month prior to the Baseline Visit;
  • Significant illness within the two weeks prior to Baseline;
  • Pregnant or lactating females;
  • History of porphyria or liver disease and/or positive for one or more of the following serological results:
  • A positive hepatitis C antibody test (anti-HCV)
  • A positive hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)
  • A positive HIV test result
  • Use of any food or beverage containing grapefruit or grapefruit juice, apple or orange juice, vegetables from the mustard green family (e.g. kale, broccoli, watercress, collard greens, kohlrabi, Brussels sprouts, mustard greens) and charbroiled meats for at least 2 weeks before the Baseline Visit until the end of the study;
  • Inability to be venipunctured and/or tolerate venous access;
  • Previous partici
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02130999). 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.

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