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PT-141

Bremelanotide, Vyleesi

Quick Stats
Studies 74
Trials 10
Score 2
2019 pubmed 18 citations

Responder Analyses from a Phase 2b Dose-Ranging Study of Bremelanotide.

Althof. Stanley S; Derogatis. Leonard R LR; Greenberg. Sally S; Clayton. Anita H AH; Jordan. Robert R; Lucas. Johna J; Spana. Carl C

Key Findings

  • The drug produced statistically significant improvements on seven patient‑reported sexual function measures compared with placebo.
  • Responder analyses identified the smallest changes that matter to patients, confirming the clinical relevance of the benefits.
  • Bremelanotide was well tolerated, with no major safety concerns at the 1.75 mg dose.

Practical Outcomes

  • For those interested in using PT‑141 off‑label, the study supports a 1.75 mg sub‑cutaneous dose as an effective amount for enhancing sexual desire in women. The safety data suggest it is generally well tolerated, but benefits were measured only in pre‑menopausal women with specific sexual dysfunction diagnoses, so broader applicability is uncertain.

Summary

A Phase 2b study showed that a single 1.75 mg injection of bremelanotide (also called PT‑141) can improve sexual desire and satisfaction in pre‑menopausal women with low sexual drive, with a safety profile similar to placebo.

Abstract

Responder analyses are used to determine whether changes that occur during a clinical trial are clinically meaningful; for subjective endpoints such as those based on patient-reported outcomes (PROs), responder analyses are particularly useful. To identify the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for selected scores on questionnaires assessing female sexual functioning and to use these differences to analyze the response in a large, controlled, phase 2b, dose-finding study of bremelanotide in premenopausal women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) and mixed HSDD/female sexual arousal disorder (FSAD). The responder analyses were performed for the change from baseline to end of study for a total of 7 endpoints. Each PRO endpoint was assessed using at least 1 of 4 types of responder analyses: a planned analysis anchored to MCIDs based on expert estimates (historical anchors); post hoc analyses based on self-reported global benefit; receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves; and cumulative distribution function. The prespecified analysis groups were all female sexual dysfunction (FSD)-based diagnoses (all study participants), those with HSDD alone, and a combined group of those with FSAD alone plus those with mixed HSDD/FSAD. Post hoc analyses were also performed for subjects with mixed HSDD/FSAD with a primary diagnosis of HSDD. MCIDs based on the ROC curves for changes in Female Sexual Function Index-desire domain, Female Sexual Distress Scale-Desire/Arousal/Orgasm (FSDS-DAO) total score, FSDS-DAO item 13 and 14 scores, and number of satisfying sexual events. Outcomes matched those based on input from clinical experts. For all 7 endpoints, responder rates at the 1.75 mg dose in the overall modified intention-to-treat population achieved statistical significance compared with placebo (P ≤ .03). These responder definitions were subsequently used in the bremelanotide phase 3 registration studies (RECONNECT) that evaluated the safety and efficacy of the bremelanotide 1.75 mg subcutaneous dose in premenopausal women with HSDD. MCIDs for this study were based on changes from a single-blind phase to account for changes due to the placebo effect. These analyses were restricted to a study population composed only of premenopausal women with a clinical diagnosis of HSDD and/or FSAD and were based on data from the same clinical trial. Bremelanotide was safe and well tolerated and demonstrated significant improvement in efficacy vs placebo in the phase 2b trial. The multiple responder analyses offer a valuable approach for determining clinically important effects of bremelanotide for HSDD and FSAD. Althof S, Derogatis LR, Greenberg S, et al. Responder Analyses from a Phase 2b Dose-Ranging Study of Bremelanotide. J Sex Med 2019;16:1226-1235.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-07-02T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.jsxm.2019.05.012

Citations

18

References

12