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New drug may treat IBS

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A new drug significantly reduces the abdominal pain and constipation characteristic of certain types of irritable bowel syndrome, according to two new studies.

Both phase 3 trials, published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology, formed much of the basis for approval of the drug, Linzess (linaclotide), by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in August, said Dr William Chey, lead author of one of the studies and co-editor-in-chief of the journal.

"These are as good a set of results as we've seen on a drug for patients with constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome," said Chey, who is a professor of medicine at the University of Michigan Health System, in Ann Arbor.

Both trials were funded by Forest Research Institute and Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc., which make the drug. An Ironwood employee provided editorial assistance for both studies.

What is IBS?

Irritable bowel syndrome is a difficult-to-diagnose and difficult-to-treat condition that can have paradoxically opposite symptoms.

Although patients with irritable bowel syndrome universally complain of abdominal pain and discomfort, this can be due either to diarrhoea or constipation or a combination, Chey said.

No one knows exactly what causes the condition (and it may be more than one condition) so a diagnosis is made based on symptoms.

Until the approval of Linzess, only two drugs were approved for the condition, one for constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome and one for diarrhoea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome, Chey said.

And roughly half of patients don't have adequate symptom relief with prescription drugs, over-the-counter medications or dietary changes, he added.

How the study was done

The trial led by Chey involved 804 adults, mostly women, who were randomly assigned to receive 290 micrograms of Linzess or an inactive placebo once a day for six months.

Several outcomes were measured but the most rigorous was one stipulated by the FDA: that the patient reported an improvement of at least 30% in abdominal pain and an increase of at least one bowel movement each week for six to 12 weeks, among other gauges.

About one-third of participants taking Linzess experienced the FDA-specified improvements, including less pain and increased bowel movements, versus 14% of those in the placebo group, the investigators found.

On average, participants reported about 43% improvement in abdominal pain by the end of the treatment period, along with easing of other symptoms such as cramping and bloating. The improvements started almost right away.

The second trial looked at 800 patients randomly assigned to the same dose of Linzess or a placebo, this time for 12 weeks. Again, about one-third of patients taking Linzess reported improvements in pain and constipation versus 21% in the placebo group.

When patients were later switched from linaclotide to a placebo, their symptoms returned, the researchers found.

What the study found

The main side effect was diarrhoea, the study authors, led by Dr Satish Rao, of Georgia Health Sciences University in Augusta, noted in the report.

Linzess is believed to work by stimulating the secretion of chloride and water in the intestine. This helps soften the stool and stimulate contractions that can lead to bowel movements, Chey explained.

Commenting on the research, Dr Timothy Pfanner, a gastroenterologist and assistant professor of internal medicine at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, said: "This is a really interesting drug in that it works differently than anything else we have. It basically acts on some nerve receptors and stimulates them to inhibit the pain response and reduces bloating and increases motility," he added.

"There are lots of drugs out there for constipation," Pfanner noted. "What makes this different is it may actually help with the irritable bowel-type symptoms, particularly bloating and pain. That's a real advantage."

Unlike inflammatory bowel disease - which includes Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis - biopsies reveal no abnormalities in the colons of people with irritable bowel syndrome. In inflammatory bowel disease, biopsies show "all kinds of inflammation," Pfanner said. "The colon looks angry and red and swollen."

Do you suffer from IBS? How do you cope? E-mail us at community@health24.com

Read more:
Common digestive disorders

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about irritable bowel syndrome.


(Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved.)

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