Overview

Effect of Prucalopride in Patients With Severe Chronic Idiopathic Constipation

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
1996-02-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine whether prucalopride is safe and effective in patients with severe chronic constipation.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Movetis
Treatments:
Prucalopride
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients were eligible for inclusion if they were aged 18-75 years with a history of
constipation, defined as the occurrence 2 of the following criteria during the
previous 6 months or more:

- 2 spontaneous (i.e. not induced by a laxative within 24 hours) bowel movements
per week;

- 25% of stools were lumpy and/or hard;

- sensation of incomplete evacuation following 25% of stool;

- straining at defaecation for 25% of the time.

All the patients screened for the study were dependent on osmotic laxatives (macrogol, milk
of magnesia, lactulose), paraffin oil, glycerol or stimulant laxatives (antranoids,
diphenylmethanes) given orally or rectally. The osmotic laxatives were taken on a daily
base while the stimulant laxatives were restricted to 2, eventually 3 intakes per week. And
although these laxatives, all or not combined promoted defaecation in the majority of
patients, these regimens did not provide relief of constipation symptoms in none of the
patients. Furthermore, many patients reported that the effect of the laxatives declined
over time, that the intake of even stimulant laxatives was not consistently followed by
rectal evacuation or that the intake of even stimulant laxatives was not consistently
followed by rectal evacuation of that the dose and frequency of intake of laxatives had to
be limited because of intolerable side effects including vomiting and abdominal cramps.

Eligible patients were also required to have constipation causing disability, with the
patient's occupational, social and recreational activities governed by constipation and
efforts to attain relief, and to have poor results with laxative treatment and diet
counseling as determined by physician interview.

Patients also had to have a normal electromyographic inhibition pattern of the external
anal sphincter during straining (assessed at the start of the treatment phase) and an
absence of organic abnormalities of the colon (as assessed by barium enema or total
colonoscopy).

Exclusion Criteria:

- Drug-induced constipation

- Secondary causes of constipation

- Known or suspected organic large bowel disorders

- Congenital or acquired megacolon/megarectum

- History of previous abdominal surgery

- Evidence of a non-relaxing pelvic floor as the main cause of constipation

- Active proctological conditions

- Impaired renal function or clinically significant abnormalities of blood chemistry,
hematology, urinalysis or ECG.

- Patients who were pregnant, breast feeding, not using acceptable methods of birth
control or who had known illnesses or conditions that might interfere with adequate
assessment of the study drug were also excluded.