Allergan
to move Botox into late-stage testing for depression
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[April 06, 2017] (Reuters)
- Allergan plc said on Wednesday that its
Botox blockbuster wrinkle treatment just missed achieving a significant
improvement in treating depression in a mid-stage trial, but it found
the data encouraging enough to move into larger Phase III testing.
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Allergan said results from the trial on the lower of two tested
doses compared with placebo were close to what has been seen with
more traditional antidepressants on the market and consistent with
what had been reported from earlier, smaller Botox depression trials
conducted by independent researchers.
"We are encouraged by these data and the potential impact on adults
with major depressive disorder," Allergan research chief David
Nicholson said in a statement. "We plan to move forward and develop
a Phase 3 program for a potential new treatment option for
patients."
While erasing facial wrinkles remains the best known use for Botox
and accounted for roughly half of its global sales of $2.78 billion
in 2016, Allergan has continually tested the drug for a wide variety
of medical conditions.
Among the already approved medical uses for Botox are chronic
migraine, overactive bladder, severe underarm sweating, eyelid
spasms and limb spasticity.
The drug, given through a series of facial injections, just missed
achieving a statistically significant improvement compared with
placebo on the lower of two tested doses as measured by change from
baseline at week 6 in the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale
(MADRS), the company said.
In the 258-patient trial, Botox was tested in adult females
suffering from major depressive disorder. The 30-unit dose lowered
the MADRS score by 3.6 points at week 6 compared with placebo. The
50-unit dose failed to show a difference from placebo, but both were
well tolerated, the company said.
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Allergan believes that by modifying facial expression and muscle
contractions via Botox injections, there may also be a modification
of brain circuitry at work in depression.
In designing larger Phase III trials, Allergan hopes it can better
control for any placebo effect common in depression trials and
demonstrate a more clearly significant result for Botox after the
near miss, Mitchell Brin, Allergan's chief scientific officer for
Botox, said in a telephone interview.
(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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