Home » Drug Information » FDA-Approved Drugs » 2003
Medical Areas: Gastroenterology | Oncology
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Drug Information
The following information is obtained from various newswires, published
medical journal articles, and medical conference presentations.
Company: MGI Pharma, Helsinn Healthcare
Approval Status: Approved August 2003
Treatment Area: Chemotherapy side effects
Aloxi (palonosetron) is an injectable anti-vomiting and
anti-nausea agent taken just chemotherapy treatments. Palonosetron
belongs to a relatively new, but well-known, class of anti-emetics,
the 5-HT3 receptor antagonists.
Aloxi is indicated for the prevention of acute or delayed nausea
and vomiting associated with initial and repeat courses of
moderately and highly emetogenic cancer chemotherapy.
The recommended dosage of Aloxi is 0.25 mg administered as a
single dose approximately 30 minutes before the start of
chemotherapy. In Europe, the Palonosetron trademark is licensed
under the name Onicit. It will be marketed in Italy by Italfarmaco,
a privately owned pharmaceutical company.
FDA approval of Aloxi is based on three phase III clinical
trials and one phase II study. Complete response rates, defined as
no emetic episodes and no rescue medication, and other efficacy
parameters were assessed through a total of 120 hours of treatment
of chemotherapy and palonosetron injection.
Two-phase III trials tested the efficacy of Aloxi against
moderately emetogenic chemotherapy treatment. The multicenter,
randomized, double blind studies (called 99-03 and 99-04) enrolled
1,132 subjects and designed to compare the efficacy and safety
profile of palonosetron with that of a comparator agent for
prevention of CINV. Subjects in the 99-03 study were randomized to
receive single intravenous doses of 0.25 mg palonosetron, 0.75 mg
palonosetron, or 32 mg ondansetron 30 minutes prior to
moderately-emetogenic chemotherapy. In study 99-04, subjects in the
comparator arm received 100 mg dolasetron as the comparator
agent.
Results showed that the complete response rate for subjects in
the 0.25 mg palonosetron arm was significantly greater than the
complete response rate among patients who received 32 mg
ondansetron. During the first 24 hours following chemotherapy, also
called the acute phase, 81.0% of the subjects treated with a single
intravenous 0.25 mg dose of palonosetron achieved a complete
response, compared to 68.6% of patients treated with 32 mg
ondansetron. During the delayed phase, 74.1% of subjects treated
with 0.25 mg palonosetron had a complete response compared to 55.1%
of patients in the 32 mg ondansetron study arm. Results from study
99-03 were presented in an ASCO Integrated Education Session
entitled "Pathogenesis-Based Treatment of Mucositis and Nausea
and Vomiting". Results from the 99-04 trial were reported in
June 2002 at the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in
Cancer (MASCC) International Symposium.
A third double-blind, phase 3 trial (99-05) enrolled 667
subjects and compared single-dose IV ALOXI with single-dose IV
ondansetron (study 3) given 30 minutes prior to highly emetogenic
chemotherapy including cisplatin ¡Ý 60 mg/m2, cyclophosphamide >
1500 mg/m2, and dacarbazine. Results showed that during the delayed
phase 45.3% of subjects treated, with 0.25 mg palonosetron had a
complete response compared to 38.9% of subjects in the 32 mg
ondansetron trial arm. Additionally, 42.0% of the subjects given
dexamethasone prior to chemotherapy and treated with a single
intravenous 0.25 mg dose of palonosetron achieved a complete
response during the delayed phase, compared to 28.6% of subjects
treated with 32 mg ondansetron. Data showed that the median time to
first emetic episode for subjects treated with palonosetron was
more than 120 hours, compared to 42.7 hours for subjects treated
with 32 mg ondansetron.
A double-blind, dose-ranging phase 2 study evaluated the
efficacy of single-dose IV palonosetron from 0.3 to 90 µg/kg
(equivalent to < 0.1 mg to 6 mg fixed dose) in 161
chemotherapy-naïve adult cancer patients receiving
highly-emetogenic chemotherapy (either cisplatin ¡Ý 70 mg/m2 or
cyclophosphamide > 1100 mg/m2). Concomitant corticosteroids were
not administered prophylactically. Results indicated that 0.25 mg
is the lowest effective dose in preventing acute nausea and
vomiting induced by highly emetogenic chemotherapy.
Adverse events associated with the use of Aloxi may include (but
are not limited to) the following:
- Headache
- Diarrhea
- Fatigue
- Abdominal
- Pain
- Insomnia
Palonosetron is a selective serotonin subtype 3 (5-HT3) receptor
antagonist with a strong binding affinity. 5-HT3 receptors are
located on the nerve terminals of the vagus in the periphery and
centrally in the chemoreceptor trigger zone of the area postrema.
Cancer chemotherapy is associated with nausea and vomiting when
serotonin is released from the enterochromaffin cells of the small
intestine activates 5-HT3 receptors located on vagal afferents and
activates the vomiting reflex. Palonosetron may also block ion
channels involved in ventricular polarization may prolong action
potential duration. The effect of palonosetron on blood pressure,
heart rate, and ECG parameters including QTc were comparable to
ondansetron and dolasetron in clinical trials.
Bonhaus DW, Stefanich E, Loury DN, Hsu SAO, Eglen RM and
Wong EHF Allosteric interactions among agonists and
antagonists at 5-hydrotryptamine-3 receptors. J Neurochem
65(1):104-110, 1995.
Chelly J, Melson T, Pollock J, et al. Oral
RS-25259 prevents postoperative nausea and vomiting following
laparoscopic surgery. Anesthesiol 85(Suppl. 21): abstract
no. 3A, 1996. Kowalczyk BA and Dyson NH
Clark RD, Miller AB, Berger J, et al.
2-(Quinuclidin-3-yl)pyrido[4,3-b]indol-1-ones and
isoquinolin-1-ones. Potent conformationally restricted 5-HT3
receptor antagonists. J Med Chem, 36(18):2645-2657,
1993.
DiVall MV and Cersosimo RJ Palonosetron. A
novel 5-HT3 receptor antagonist for chemotherapy-associated nausea
and vomiting. Formulary, 38:414-430, 2003.