Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Johnson and Johnson submits NDA for tapentadol

Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C. has submitted a New Drug Application (NDA) to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for tapentadol hydrochloride immediate release (IR) tablets, an investigational oral analgesic for the relief of moderate to severe acute pain.

Tapentadol is a novel investigational, centrally acting oral analgesic. It has a unique profile with two mechanisms of action, combining mu-opioid receptor agonism and norepinephrine reuptake inhibition in a single molecule. It is being developed in immediate-release and extended-release formulations.

According to the American Pain Foundation, more than 25 million Americans experience acute pain each year as a result of injuries or surgeries, and a recent study estimated that 42 per cent of US hospital emergency department visits were due to pain-related problems.

Mu-opioid agonists are drugs that bind to mu-opioid receptors in the central nervous system. These drugs modify sensory and affective (mood) aspects of pain, inhibit the transmission of pain at the spinal cord and affect activity at parts of the brain that control how pain is perceived. Norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors are a type of central nervous system medication that increases the level of norepinephrine in the brain by inhibiting its re-absorption into nerve cells; these compounds have analgesic properties.

The submission is based on a full clinical development program for tapentadol. The program includes two phase III multi-centre studies that explored the efficacy and safety of multiple doses of the tapentadol IR formulation either for the treatment of acute pain in patients undergoing bunionectomy surgery or for patients with degenerative, end-stage joint disease of the hip or knee. The data from these clinical trials suggest that tapentadol has efficacy comparable to strong opioids.

Bunionectomy is a standard foot surgery. The predictable level of moderate to severe pain for several days following this surgery makes bunionectomy an appropriate model for assessing the efficacy of potent analgesics.

Data also were submitted to the FDA from an additional Phase 3 study that supported the safety profile of multiple doses of tapentadol IR in the treatment of outpatients with low back pain or pain from osteoarthritis of the hip or the knee.

More than 1,800 patients have been treated with tapentadol immediate release tablets in clinical trials to date.The most common adverse reactions in tapentadol phase II/III multiple dose, placebo- and active-controlled efficacy and safety studies (=10 per cent) were nausea, dizziness, vomiting, somnolence (sleepiness) and headache.

Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C. (J&JPRD) is conducting the clinical program for tapentadol in the United States. J&JPRD submitted the new drug application (NDA) for tapentadol on behalf of Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., an affiliated company that will hold the NDA for tapentadol.

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