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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 10/2011

Open Access 01-10-2011 | Original Article

Efficacy and tolerability of transdermal granisetron for the control of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting associated with moderately and highly emetogenic multi-day chemotherapy: a randomized, double-blind, phase III study

Authors: Ralph V. Boccia, Lucio N. Gordan, Gemma Clark, Julian D. Howell, Steven M. Grunberg, on behalf of the Sancuso Study Group

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 10/2011

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Abstract

Purpose

A novel transdermal formulation of granisetron (the granisetron transdermal delivery system (GTDS)) has been developed to deliver granisetron continuously over 7 days. This double-blind, phase III, non-inferiority study compared the efficacy and tolerability of the GTDS to daily oral granisetron for the control of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV).

Patients and methods

Six hundred forty-one patients were randomized to oral (2 mg/day, 3–5 days) or transdermal granisetron (one GTDS patch, 7 days), before receiving multi-day chemotherapy. The primary endpoint was complete control of CINV (no vomiting/retching, no more than mild nausea, no rescue medication) from chemotherapy initiation until 24 h after final administration. The prespecified non-inferiority margin was 15%.

Results

Five hundred eighty-two patients were included in the per protocol analysis. The GTDS displayed non-inferiority to oral granisetron: complete control was achieved by 60% of patients in the GTDS group, and 65% in the oral granisetron group (treatment difference, −5%; 95% confidence interval, −13–3). Both treatments were well tolerated, the most common adverse event being constipation.

Conclusions

The GTDS provides effective, well-tolerated control of CINV associated with moderately or highly emetogenic multi-day chemotherapy. It offers a convenient alternative route for delivering granisetron for up to 7 days that is as effective as oral granisetron.
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Metadata
Title
Efficacy and tolerability of transdermal granisetron for the control of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting associated with moderately and highly emetogenic multi-day chemotherapy: a randomized, double-blind, phase III study
Authors
Ralph V. Boccia
Lucio N. Gordan
Gemma Clark
Julian D. Howell
Steven M. Grunberg
on behalf of the Sancuso Study Group
Publication date
01-10-2011
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 10/2011
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-010-0990-y

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