No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2020
To assess the impact of high levels of insomnia on response to pregabalin (PGB) in patients with GAD.
Pooled data were analyzed from 6 double-blind, placebo-controlled, 4- to 6-week trials of outpatients who met DSM-IV criteria for GAD with a minimum Hamilton rating scale for anxiety (HAM-A) score ≥18. Response was evaluated for 3 fixed-dose PGB groups: 150mg/d, 300-450mg/d, and 600mg/d. A "high-insomnia" subgroup was defined by a baseline HAM-D insomnia factor score ≥4 (maximum=6).
At baseline, 482 (31%) patients met criteria for the high-insomnia subgroup, and 1073 (69%) for the low-insomnia subgroup. Mean baseline HAM-A scores were non-significantly higher (approx. 1-point) in high-insomnia vs low-insomnia patients. In high-insomnia patients, PGB produced significantly greater improvement in HAM-A total scores at LOCF-endpoint vs placebo—PGB 150mg/d (-10.3±1.01), PGB 300-450mg/d (-12.4±0.88), PGB 600mg/d (-11.6±0.72), and placebo (-8.4±0.66) (P<0.0001, all comparisons). Effect sizes for endpoint HAM-A change were higher in high-insomnia than low-insomnia subgroups (0.47 vs 0.32). Endpoint HAM-A-score changes were the same (-12.0) on PGB in both insomnia subgroups; placebo response was higher in low-insomnia patients. Significantly more high-insomnia patients on PGB were insomnia responders (reduction to minimal-to-no insomnia) (75.2%, all doses combined) vs placebo (61.5%; P<0.005). Rates of treatment-emergent insomnia were 4.7% for all PGB doses combined vs 5.4% for placebo.
Pregabalin was well tolerated, and improved overall anxiety symptoms, while specifically improving insomnia in patients with GAD presenting with high levels of concurrent insomnia.
Comments
No Comments have been published for this article.