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Study Shows Pregabalin Reduces Pain Related to Fibromyalgia Regardless of Symptoms of Anxiety or Depression

By analyzing data from previous clinical trials, researchers concluded that pregabalin (Lyrica) reduced pain related to fibromyalgia in patients regardless of whether they experienced symptoms of anxiety or depression at the beginning of the study. The results were presented at the American Academy of Neurology annual meeting in April. According to a Pfizer press release, the study also showed that patients' self-reported improvements were more closely associated with improvements in pain and sleep than fatigue or symptoms of anxiety or depression.

Fibromyalgia is the most common, chronic widespread pain condition in the United States and is thought to result from neurological changes in how patients perceive pain. Fibromyalgia is usually accompanied by poor sleep, stiffness and fatigue.

"The data showed that Lyrica reduced fibromyalgia pain, and alleviating that pain was associated with patients' overall feeling of well-being," said Dr. Lesley Arnold, one of the study's authors and associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center. "Understandably, many patients with a chronic pain condition such as fibromyalgia also experience depression and anxiety, and importantly we found that Lyrica helped reduce pain in patients regardless of the presence of symptoms of these co-morbid conditions."

About the Analysis
The results are from a retrospective, pooled analysis of data from three placebo-controlled clinical trials (8 weeks, 13 weeks and 14 weeks long) of Lyrica in over 2,000 fibromyalgia patients. These studies randomized patients to receive Lyrica 150 mg, 300 mg, 450 mg or 600 mg or placebo dosed twice daily. Patients were asked to measure their pain on a scale of zero to 10; the baseline score for study participants was 6.9 (150 mg, 450 mg, 600 mg) or 7.0 (300 mg). A score of 4.0 to 6.9 is considered moderate pain and a score of greater than 7.0 is considered moderate to severe pain on this 10-point scale.

In the studies, 38% of fibromyalgia patients had moderate to severe anxiety symptoms, while 27% had moderate to severe depressive symptoms, as assessed using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scales (HADS-A or HADS-D). Patients with severe depression or unstable psychiatric conditions were excluded from the studies.

The new analysis confirmed that Lyrica was significantly more effective than placebo in reducing pain in patients with fibromyalgia. Patients receiving 600 mg a day of Lyrica had a pain reduction of 2.08 on the pain scale; 450 mg a day had a reduction of 2.01; 300 mg a day had a reduction of 1.76; 150 mg a day had a reduction of 1.37, and placebo had a reduction of 1.25.

The analysis also examined the relationship between improvements in pain, sleep, fatigue, anxiety and depressive symptoms with patients reporting feeling "much improved" or "very much improved" as measured by the Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC). The PGIC is a standardized, self-reported tool that measures the change in a patient's overall status ranging from "very much improved" to "very much worse."

Pain reduction was found to have the greatest association on patients reporting improvement as measured by PGIC. The relationships between feeling much or very much improved were strongest for pain and sleep, and less pronounced for fatigue and symptoms of anxiety or depression, but statistically significant for all variables.

The most common side effects in the pooled analysis versus placebo of these three studies were dizziness and somnolence, followed by weight gain, blurred vision and dry mouth.

Source: Pfizer, Inc.

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Page last updated 5/12/2008 8:12:00 AM

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