Oliceridine is Associated with Reduced Risk of Vomiting and Need for Rescue Antiemetics Compared to Morphine: Exploratory Analysis from Two Phase 3 Randomized Placebo and Active Controlled Trials.

Pain and Therapy
Timothy L BeardEugene R Viscusi

Abstract

Use of parenteral opioids is a major risk factor for postoperative nausea and vomiting. Conventional opioids bind to µ-opioid receptors (MOR), stimulate both the G-protein signaling (achieving analgesia); and the β-arrestin pathway (associated with opioid-related adverse effects). Oliceridine, a next-generation IV opioid, is a G-protein selective MOR agonist, with limited recruitment of β-arrestin. In two randomized, placebo- and morphine-controlled phase 3 studies of patients with moderate-to-severe acute pain following bunionectomy or abdominoplasty, oliceridine at demand doses of 0.1, 0.35, and 0.5 mg provided rapid and sustained analgesia vs. placebo with favorable gastrointestinal (GI) tolerability. In this exploratory analysis, we utilized a clinical endpoint assessing gastrointestinal tolerability, "complete GI response" defined as the proportion of patients with no vomiting and no use of rescue antiemetic to characterize the GI tolerability profile of oliceridine vs. morphine. A logistic regression model was utilized to compare oliceridine (pooled regimens) vs. morphine, after controlling for analgesia (using the sum of pain intensity difference [SPID]-48/24 [bunionectomy/abdominoplasty] with pre-rescue scores carried f...Continue Reading

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Citations

Jan 12, 2021·The Annals of Pharmacotherapy·Yang LiuJunyi Yang
Aug 10, 2021·Expert Opinion on Drug Safety·Hon Sen Tan, Ashraf S Habib
Aug 17, 2021·Journal of Clinical Pharmacology·David Vearrier, Oliver Grundmann
Aug 23, 2021·Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology·Janna E Finlay, Kate Leslie
Nov 25, 2021·Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery·Ammar A H Azzam, David G Lambert

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