Inkyung Song, Sun-Kyeong Cho, S. Nedeljkovic
Feb 24, 2021
Citations
0
Influential Citations
4
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Pain medicine
Abstract
OBJECTIVE VVZ-149 is a small molecule that both inhibits the glycine transporter type 2 and the serotonin receptor 5 hydroxytryptamine 2 A. In a randomized, parallel-group, and double-blind trial (NCT02844725), we investigated the analgesic efficacy and safety of VVZ-149 Injections, which is under clinical development as a single-use injectable product for treating moderate to severe postoperative pain. METHODS Sixty patients undergoing laparoscopic and robotic-laparoscopic gastrectomy were randomly assigned to receive a 10-h intravenous infusion of VVZ-149 Injections or placebo, initiated approximately 1 h before completion of surgical suturing. Major outcomes included pain intensity and opioid consumption via patient-controlled analgesia and rescue analgesia provided "as needed". The treatment efficacy of VVZ-149 was further examined in a subpopulation requiring early rescue medication, previously associated with the presence of high levels of preoperative negative affect in a prior Phase 2 study (NCT02489526). RESULTS Pain intensity was lower in the VVZ-149 (n = 30) than the placebo group (n = 29), reaching statistical significance at 4 h post-emergence (p < 0.05), with a 29.5% reduction in opioid consumption for 24 h and fewer demands for patient-controlled analgesia. In the rescued subgroup, VVZ-149 further reduced pain intensity (p < 0.05) with 32.6% less opioid consumption for 24 h compared to placebo patients. CONCLUSIONS VVZ-149 demonstrated effective analgesia with reduced postoperative pain and opioid requirements. Consistent with the results from the previous Phase 2 study, patients with early rescue requirement had greater benefit from VVZ-149, supporting the hypothesis that VVZ-149 may alleviate the affective component of pain and mitigate excessive use of opioids postoperatively.