Abstract
ATP acting via P2X3 receptors is an important mediator of refractory chronic cough (RCC). This phase 2a double-blinded crossover study assessed the safety, tolerability and efficacy of eliapixant (BAY 1817080), a selective P2X3 receptor antagonist, in adults with RCC attending specialist centres. In period A, patients received placebo for 2 weeks then eliapixant 10 mg for 1 week. In period B, patients received eliapixant 50, 200 and 750 mg twice daily for 1 week per dose level. Patients were randomised 1:1 to period A−B (n=20) or B−A (n=20). The primary efficacy endpoint was change in cough frequency assessed over 24 h (VitaloJAK). Primary safety endpoint was frequency and severity of adverse events (AEs). Thirty-seven patients completed randomised therapy. Mean cough frequency fell by 17.4% versus baseline with placebo. Eliapixant reduced cough frequency at doses ≥50 mg (reduction versus placebo at 750 mg, 25%: 90% confidence interval, 11.5–36.5%; p=0.002). Doses ≥50 mg also significantly reduced cough severity. AEs, mostly mild or moderate, were reported in 65% of patients with placebo and 41−49% receiving eliapixant. Cumulative rates of taste-related AEs were 3% with placebo and 5−21% with eliapixant: all were mild. Selective P2X3 antagonism with eliapixant significantly reduced cough frequency and severity, confirming this as a viable therapeutic pathway for RCC. Taste-related side-effects were lower at therapeutic doses than with the less selective P2X3 antagonist gefapixant. Selective P2X3 antagonism appears to be a novel therapeutic approach for RCC.
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CITATION STYLE
Morice, A., Smith, J. A., McGarvey, L., Birring, S. S., Parker, S. M., Turner, A., … Friedrich, C. (2021). Eliapixant (BAY 1817080), a P2X3 receptor antagonist, in refractory chronic cough: A randomised, placebo-controlled, crossover phase 2a study. European Respiratory Journal, 58(5). https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.04240-2020
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