4 research outputs found
Efficacy and Safety of Once-Daily Vibegron for Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Patients Aged ≥65 and ≥75 Years: Subpopulation Analysis from the EMPOWUR Randomized, International, Phase III Study
Background
Overactive bladder (OAB) is common among older adults. The efficacy and safety of vibegron for the treatment of OAB were demonstrated in the international, phase III EMPOWUR trial. This subpopulation analysis from EMPOWUR assessed the efficacy and safety of vibegron in patients aged ≥ 65 and ≥ 75 years. Methods
In EMPOWUR, patients with OAB were randomly assigned 5:5:4 to receive once-daily vibegron 75 mg, placebo, or tolterodine 4 mg extended release, respectively, once daily for 12 weeks. Coprimary efficacy endpoints were change from baseline at week 12 in average daily number of micturitions and urge urinary incontinence (UUI) episodes; a key secondary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline at week 12 in average daily number of urgency episodes. Safety was assessed through adverse events (AEs). Efficacy analyses compared vibegron with placebo; no efficacy comparisons were made between vibegron and tolterodine. Results
Of the 1463 patients with evaluable efficacy data, 628 patients were aged ≥ 65 years, and 179 were aged ≥ 75 years. After 12 weeks, patients treated with once-daily vibegron 75 mg in both age subgroups showed significant improvements from baseline versus placebo in all three symptoms of OAB: daily micturitions (≥ 65 years, P \u3c 0.0001; ≥75 years, P \u3c 0.05), UUI episodes (≥ 65 years, P \u3c 0.001; ≥ 75 years, P \u3c 0.0001), and urgency episodes (≥ 65 years, P \u3c 0.01; ≥ 75 years, P \u3c 0.01). Significant reductions from baseline versus placebo in daily micturitions, UUI episodes, and urgency episodes were observed beginning at week 2 for patients aged ≥ 65 years treated with vibegron. In patients aged ≥ 65 years, 50.0% of those receiving vibegron versus 29.8% receiving placebo experienced a ≥ 75% reduction in UUI episodes at week 12 (P\u3c 0.0001). Rates of cardiovascular-associated AEs were low for patients receiving vibegron ( Conclusions
In this subpopulation analysis of patients with OAB aged ≥ 65 and ≥ 75 years from the EMPOWUR study, once-daily vibegron 75 mg showed rapid onset and robust efficacy versus placebo and was generally safe and well tolerated, consistent with results from the overall population
Efficacy and Safety of Vibegron for the Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Women: A Subgroup Analysis From the Double-Blind, Randomized, Controlled EMPOWUR Trial
Importance The international phase 3 EMPOWUR trial demonstrated efficacy and safety of vibegron, a newer b3-adrenergic receptor agonist, in adults with overactive bladder (OAB). Women are disproportionately affected by OAB, especially those with bothersome symptoms, such as urge urinary incontinence (UUI). Objective This subgroup analysis from EMPOWUR assessed efficacy and safety of vibegron in women. Study Design In EMPOWUR, patients with OAB were randomized 5:5:4 to 12 weeks of treatment with once-daily vibegron 75 mg, placebo, or tolterodine 4-mg extended release. Efficacy end points included change from baseline at week 12 in mean daily number of micturitions, UUI episodes, and urgency episodes. Safety was assessed through adverse events (AEs). Results Of the patients included in the analysis, 1286 (84.9%) were women (vibegron, n = 463; placebo, n = 459; tolterodine, n = 364). At week 12, women receiving vibegron showed significant reductions (95% confidence intervals of least squares mean differences does not include 0) from baseline versus placebo in mean daily micturitions, UUI episodes, and urgency episodes, with least squares mean differences (95% confidence intervals) of −0.5 (−0.8 to −0.2), −0.7 (−1.0 to −0.4), and −0.8 (−1.3 to −0.4), respectively. Treatment-emergent AE incidence was similar with vibegron (39%) and placebo (35%); the most common AE with incidence higher with vibegron (4.3%) than placebo (2.6%) was headache. Conclusions In this subgroup analysis, women receiving vibegron showed significant reductions in key efficacy end points versus placebo and favorable safety profile, consistent with the overall results from EMPOWUR, suggesting that vibegron is efficacious and safe for the treatment of OAB in this patient population
Plain language summary of safety and symptom improvement with vibegron in people with overactive bladder: results from the EMPOWUR study
What is this summary about?
This is a plain language summary of an article originally published in the
Journal of Urology. Overactive bladder (also called OAB) has been treated
with the same type of medicine for more than 40 years. Vibegron is in
a newer class of medicine for treating overactive bladder called beta-3
adrenergic receptor agonists. The EMPOWUR study was a phase 3 clinical
trial that looked at whether vibegron was safe and improved symptoms
in people with overactive bladder. Vibegron was approved by the US Food
and Drug Administration (also called the FDA) based in part on the results
of this study.
What were the results?
Participants of the EMPOWUR study who took vibegron showed an
improvement in their overactive bladder symptoms. These symptoms
include the number of urinations (peeing), the urgent need to urinate, and accidental urination (bladder leaks). After 12
weeks, participants who took vibegron had significantly greater improvements than participants who took placebo.
What do the results mean?
This study suggests that vibegron could safely improve symptoms in people with overactive bladder
Plain language summary: does treatment with vibegron result in improvements in overactive bladder (OAB) symptoms that are meaningful to people with OAB?
What is this summary about?
This is a plain language summary of an article published in the journal
Advances in Therapy. In 2020, the US Food and Drug Administration (also
called the FDA) approved a medicine called vibegron to treat overactive
bladder, also called OAB. The key results used to approve vibegron
were from the EMPOWUR study. In the EMPOWUR study, participants
who took vibegron had fewer urination episodes, urgency episodes,
and bladder leaks each day than those who took a pill containing no
medicine, called a placebo. At the end of the study, participants also
rated how much their overactive bladder symptoms changed overall
during EMPOWUR by responding to a survey. Many participants rated
their overactive bladder symptoms as improved overall.
This study asked if improvements in the number of urination episodes, urgency episodes, and bladder leaks caused by urgency
were associated with feeling better overall. This study also looked at how many participants in the EMPOWUR study
had improvements in the number of urination episodes, urgency episodes, and bladder leaks that were big enough to matter.
A separate group of people with overactive bladder were asked about the magnitude of improvements that would be
important to them. This group had not participated in the EMPOWUR study.
What were the results?
EMPOWUR participants who reported that taking medicine resulted in their overactive bladder symptoms getting better
overall also generally reported fewer daily urinations, urgency episodes, and bladder leaks after treatment. Many had changes
in their symptoms that were meaningful. Meaningful was defined for each symptom as: at least 15% fewer urinations, 50%
fewer urgency episodes, and 75% fewer bladder leaks. Participants who received vibegron had meaningful reductions in the
daily number of episodes of urination, urgency, and bladder leaks more often than those who received the placebo (pill with
no active medicine). People with overactive bladder who did not participate in the study were interviewed and said that
improvements to those symptoms, similar to those seen in the EMPOWUR study, would be important to them.
What do the results mean?
This study suggests that the results we measured in the EMPOWUR study may
also reflect changes in overactive bladder symptoms that are big enough to be
important to people with overactive bladder. Many participants who took vibegron
in the EMPOWUR study felt that it helped to improve their individual overactive
bladder symptoms. This may also help improve quality of life of participants