The pharmacokinetics of the two pharmacologically active metabolites of sibutramine (metabolites 1 and 2) were not significantly different between the young and elderly groups in this study. Based on this information, a similar dosing regimen would be appropriate for both the young and elderly.
To obtain meaningful results in any clinical trial, patients need to be allocated to treatments in such a way that valid analysis can be carried out. Balancing treatment groups before analysis is carried out is more desirable than trying to compensate for incomparability at a later date. Therefore, the development of allocation procedures to produce comparable groups in which prognostic factors are equally represented is important. Minimization, a deterministic allocation method, aims to ensure balance on such factors, particularly in small trials when traditional randomization methods are likely to fail. However, views on the use of conventional analysis following minimization are divided. The use of minimization in two randomised crossover trials is described where, in addition to the comparisons between randomised treatments, it was desired to have balance between groups based on differential trial procedures. Theoretical concerns about the use of minimization are not applicable in this setting, and therefore minimization is shown to be a useful technique for obtaining balance.
Achondroplasia causes narrowing of the foramen magnum and the spinal canal leading to increased mortality due to cervicomedullary compression in infants and significant morbidity due to spinal stenosis later in adulthood. Vosoritide is a C-natriuretic peptide analogue that has been shown to improve endochondral ossification in children with achondroplasia. The objective of this trial is to evaluate the safety of vosoritide and whether vosoritide can improve the growth of the foramen magnum and spinal canal in children that may require decompression surgery. An Achondroplasia Foramen Magnum Score will be used to identify infants at risk of requiring decompression surgery. This is a 2-year open label randomized controlled trial of vosoritide in infants with achondroplasia ages 0 to ≤12 months. Approximately 20 infants will be randomized 1:1 to either open label once daily subcutaneous vosoritide combined with standard of care or standard of care alone. The primary and secondary aims of the study are to evaluate the safety and efficacy of vosoritide in children with cervicomedullary compression at risk of requiring decompression surgery. The trial will be carried out in specialized skeletal dysplasia treatment centers with well established multidisciplinary care pathways and standardized approaches to the neurosurgical management of cervicomedually compression. After 2 years, infants randomized to standard of care alone will be eligible to switch to vosoritide plus standard of care for an additional 3 years. This pioneering trial hopes to address the important question as to whether treatment with vosoritide at an early age in infants at risk of requiring cervicomedullary decompression surgery is safe, and can improve growth at the foramen magnum and spinal canal alleviating stenosis. This in turn may reduce compression of surrounding structures including the neuraxis and spinal cord, which could alleviate future morbidity and mortality. Trial registrations: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04554940; EudraCT number, 2020-001055-40
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