Eliapixant (BAY 1817080), a P2X3 receptor antagonist, in refractory chronic cough: A randomised, placebo-controlled, crossover phase 2a study

90Citations
Citations of this article
53Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

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.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

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

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free