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168 Effect of Dasotraline on Body Weight in Patients with Binge-Eating Disorder
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2020
Abstract:
Binge-eating disorder (BED) is associated with obesity (BMI ≥30) in approximately 40-45% of patients. Dasotraline is a long-acting dopamine/norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor with a PK profile characterized by slow absorption and an elimination half-life of 47-77 hours, permitting once-daily dosing. In a recent placebo-controlled, flexible-dose study, dasotraline demonstrated significant efficacy in patients with BED. We now report an analysis from this study of the effect of dasotraline on body weight.
Patients with moderate-to-severe BED, based on DSM-5 criteria, were randomized to 12 weeks of double-blind flexible-dose treatment with dasotraline (4-8 mg/d) vs. placebo. The primary efficacy outcome was number of binge-eating days/week. Mean change in body weight at Week 12 (assessed as a safety outcome) was analyzed by baseline body mass index (BMI, kg/m2) category. Inferential statistics were not performed.
The safety population consisted of 317 patients (female, 84%; mean age, 38.2 years; mean weight, 97.3 kg). At baseline, the proportions of patients in each BMI category were as follows: normal (<25 kg/m2: 5.7%), overweight (25 to <30 kg/m2: 18.3%), obesity class I (30 to <35 kg/m2: 24.9%), class II (35 to <40 kg/m2: 29.3%), and class III (≥40 kg/m2: 21.8%). For the overall patient sample, treatment with dasotraline significantly reduced the number of binge-eating days per week vs. placebo (-3.74 vs. -2.75; P<0.0001; effect size = 0.74). Mean changes at Week 12 in weight (kg) for completers treated with dasotraline vs. placebo, by baseline BMI category, were as follows: normal weight (-4.6 vs. -0.2), overweight (-5.8 vs. +1.3), and combined obesity classes I-III (-6.2 vs. +0.3). Among obese patients (Class I-III, combined) treated with dasotraline, weight reduction (≥5%) was observed in 45.3% of patients (vs. 4.1% on placebo); and weight reduction ≥10% in approximately 13.7% of patients (vs. none on placebo). Weight-related adverse events, for dasotraline vs. placebo, consisted of decreased appetite (19.7% vs. 6.9%), decreased weight (12.1% vs. 0%), and increased weight (0.6% vs. 1.3%).
Among patients completing 12 weeks of treatment with dasotraline, weight reduction ≥5% was observed in 45% of obese patients with a BMI ≥30. The most frequent weight-related adverse event was decreased appetite, reported in approximately one in five patients treated with dasotraline.
Clinicaltrials.gov number: NCT02564588
Supported by funding from Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Inc.
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