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Clinical Trials/NCT00174941
NCT00174941
Completed
Phase 2

Phase II, Open-Label Study, to Assess the Long-Term Safety of Oral TMX-67 in Subjects With Gout

Takeda0 sites116 target enrollmentMarch 2001
ConditionsGout
InterventionsFebuxostat

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Febuxostat
Conditions
Gout
Sponsor
Takeda
Enrollment
116
Primary Endpoint
Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 6 Visit.
Status
Completed
Last Updated
15 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety of febuxostat, once daily (QD), in maintaining serum urate levels within clinically acceptable levels in subjects with gout.

Detailed Description

Uric acid is the end product of purine degradation in humans. Hyperuricemia, a urate concentration in serum exceeding the limit of urate solubility (approximately 7.0 milligrams per deciliter \[mg/dL\]), is a common biochemical abnormality. Aberrations in any of the multiple mechanisms involved in the production and/or excretion of uric acid may increase serum urate concentrations, with persistent hyperuricemia as a marker for extracellular fluid monosodium urate supersaturation. As such, hyperuricemia is a necessary (but often not sufficient) risk factor for monosodium urate crystal deposition in tissues and is the fundamental pathophysiological process underlying the clinical manifestations of gout, which is a chronic disease characterized by urate crystal formation and deposition in joints and bones. Gout may progress from episodic attacks of acute inflammatory arthritis to a disabling chronic disorder characterized by deforming arthropathy; destructive deposits of urate crystals (tophi) in bones, joints, and other organs; structural and functional renal impairment due to interstitial urate crystal deposition; and urinary tract stones composed entirely or in part of uric acid crystals. Management of gout requires chronic treatment aimed at lowering serum urate into a subsaturating range (usually \<6.0 mg/dL) in which crystal formation and deposition are prevented or reversed. Febuxostat (TMX-67) is a non-purine selective xanthine oxidase inhibitor being developed as an orally administered agent for management of hyperuricemia in patients with gout. Subjects who want to participate in this study will have successfully completed study TMX-00-004 (NCT00174967). All participants will initially receive an 80 mg dose. Dose titrations will occur in order to obtain and maintain clinically acceptable serum urate levels.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2001
End Date
December 2006
Last Updated
15 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Takeda

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Hyperuricemia (serum uric acid ≥8.0 mg/dL upon entering parent study TMX-00-004).
  • Must meet American College of Rheumatology criteria for gout.
  • Must have adequate renal function (serum creatinine \<1.5 mg/dL).
  • Must have completed four weeks of double-blind dosing in Study TMX-00-
  • Must not have experienced any serious study drug-related Adverse Events in Study TMX 00-
  • Females of childbearing potential who are sexually active must agree to use adequate contraception, and can neither be pregnant nor lactating from Screening throughout the duration of the study.

Exclusion Criteria

  • History of xanthinuria
  • Alcohol consumption \>14/week
  • Has a History of significant concomitant illness
  • Has active liver disease.
  • Has a body mass index greater than 50 kg/m2
  • Any other significant medical condition that would interfere with the treatment, safety or compliance with the protocol, as defined by the investigator.

Arms & Interventions

1

Intervention: Febuxostat

2

Intervention: Febuxostat

3

Intervention: Febuxostat

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 6 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 6

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 6 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 6 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 12 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 12

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 12 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 12 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 18 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 18

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 18 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 18 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 24 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 24

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 24 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 24 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 36 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 36

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 36 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 36 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 48 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 48

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 48 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 48 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Month 60 Visit.

Time Frame: Month 60

Serum urate values were obtained at the Month 60 visit. The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the Month 60 visit was summarized.

Percentage of Subjects Whose Serum Urate Level Decreases to or is Maintained at <6.0 mg/dL at Final Visit.

Time Frame: Last Visit on treatment (up to 66 months).

The percentage of subjects whose serum urate was \<6.0 mg/dL at the final visit was summarized. The final visit was the last visit at which a serum urate value was collected.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 6 Visit.(Baseline and Month 6)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 12 Visit.(Baseline and Month 12)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 18 Visit.(Baseline and Month 18)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 24 Visit.(Baseline and Month 24)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 36 Visit.(Baseline and Month 36)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 48 Visit.(Baseline and Month 48)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Month 60 Visit.(Baseline and Month 60)
  • Percent Change in Serum Urate Levels From Baseline at Final Visit.(Baseline and Last Visit on treatment (up to 66 months).)

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