Naloxone Lotion for the Treatment of Pruritus in Mycosis Fungoides

NIH RePORTER · FDA · R01 · $80,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

7. Project Summary/Abstract The project which is the subject of this grant application is a Phase 3 clinical study to demonstrate safety and efficacy of Naloxone 0.5% Hydrochloride (HCl) Lotion for the relief of pruritus associated with [the] mycosis fungoides (MF) [as well as Sèzary syndrome (SS), both being] form[s] of cutaneous t-cell lymphoma (CTCL). The seriousness of pruritus (itch) that accompanies skin disorders such as MF, the most prevalent subtype of CTCL, is often underestimated. Severe chronic pruritus has clinically significant effects on morbidity and mortality that impact clinical management of the disease its costs. As a symptom, itch is uncomfortable and annoying, distracts and disrupts activities of daily life, interferes with sleep, and may affect social interactive behavior. Moreover, chronic pruritus has been associated with considerable impairment of quality of life comparable to chronic pain.1 The mortality rate in patients with MF is estimated to be twice as frequent in patients with itching than in those without itching.2 Current medications do not completely address the pruritus associated with MF which leads to infections from excoriations. Naloxone 0.5% HCl Lotion will fill this unmet medical need. Traditional anti-pruritic drugs, i.e. antihistamines, tricyclic antidepressants, and corticosteroids, are not generally effective in managing the itch associated with MF.11 Current evidence suggests that MF related pruritus may be mediated by a peripheral opinergic pathway and provides the scientific rationale for treating MF related pruritus with the opioid antagonist. Naloxone is classified pharmacologically as an opioid antagonist with activity at multiple opioid receptors including Mu, Delta, Kappa1 and Kappa3.3 The treatment of pruritus associated with MF using a topical formulation of naloxone represents a novel therapeutic approach [as systemic administration is not practical due to the short half life of naloxone in blood.] This is a 6 – 9 week, double-blind, vehicle-controlled, crossover study of approximately 160 adult subjects that have moderate to severe pruritus (a minimum score of 5 on the 0 – 10 point scale) associated with MF [or SS]. The study is composed of a 1 week non-treatment Screening Period during which subjects will be required to complete a daily diary assessing overall pruritus. The 1 week Screening Period is followed by a two week Treatment Period, 4 – 28 day Washout Period, and another two week Treatment Period. Subjects will be randomized 1:1 to receive either Naloxone 0.5% HCl Lotion or Vehicle Lotion in the first Treatment Period, and the other in the second Treatment Period. The primary efficacy variable will be the change from Baseline in the weekly average of the 11-point Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) for Pruritus assessed at Day 14 of each Treatment Period. The planned duration of the Phase 3 study is approximately 2 years. Following this Phase 3 study, Elorac, Inc. will conduct a 6 month sa...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10476265
Project number
5R01FD005396-04
Recipient
ELORAC, INC.
Principal Investigator
JOEL E BERNSTEIN
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
FDA
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$80,000
Award type
5
Project period
2016-09-05 → 2023-02-28