Volume 4, Issue 6 p. 454-462
Article

Evaluation of opicapone on cardiac repolarization in a thorough QT/QTc study

Roberto Pinto

Roberto Pinto

Dept. Research & Development, BIAL–Portela & Cª–S.A., 4745-457 S. Mamede do Coronado, Portugal

Dept. Pharmacology & Therapeutics, Faculty of Medicine, University Porto, Porto, Portugal

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Philippe l'Hostis

Philippe l'Hostis

Biotrial, Rennes, France

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Alain Patat

Alain Patat

Biotrial, Rennes, France

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Marie-Claude Homery

Marie-Claude Homery

Biotrial, Rennes, France

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Amílcar Falcão

Amílcar Falcão

Dept. Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal

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Teresa Nunes

Teresa Nunes

Dept. Research & Development, BIAL–Portela & Cª–S.A., 4745-457 S. Mamede do Coronado, Portugal

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José-Francisco Rocha

José-Francisco Rocha

Dept. Research & Development, BIAL–Portela & Cª–S.A., 4745-457 S. Mamede do Coronado, Portugal

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Patrício Soares-da-Silva

Corresponding Author

Patrício Soares-da-Silva

Dept. Research & Development, BIAL–Portela & Cª–S.A., 4745-457 S. Mamede do Coronado, Portugal

Dept. Pharmacology & Therapeutics, Faculty of Medicine, University Porto, Porto, Portugal

MedInUP–Center for Drug Discovery and Innovative Medicines, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

Corresponding Author: Professor Patrício Soares-da-Silva,Departmentof Research and Development, BIAL, À Av. da Siderurgia Nacional, 4745-457 S. Mamede do Coronado, Portugal

(e-mail: [email protected])

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First published: 03 March 2015
Citations: 14

Abstract

Opicapone, a novel third-generation catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibitor for use as adjunctive therapy in levodopa-treated Parkinson's disease patients, was investigated on cardiac repolarization in healthy adult volunteers. This was a single-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, open-label active-controlled, 4-period crossover study conducted in 64 subjects. In each period, subjects received a single oral dose of 50 mg opicapone, 800 mg opicapone, placebo, or 400 mg moxifloxacin and 24-hour 12-lead Holter monitoring was performed on day -1 (baseline) and after each single dose. After a single oral administrations of 50 and 800 mg opicapone, opicapone was the major entity in the circulation, with a median tmax of 1.5–2.0 hours. Opicapone was rapidly eliminated, with an elimination half-life of 1–2 hours. There was no clinically relevant effect of 50 and 800 mg opicapone versus placebo on cardiac depolarization or repolarization. All upper bounds of the 1-sided 95% confidence interval (CI) were below 10 milliseconds, confirming that opicapone has no QT-prolonging effect. Moxifloxacin caused an increase in the QTcI, with a lower bound of the 2-sided 95% CI always higher than 5 milliseconds, around the tmax of peak concentration, demonstrating assay sensitivity. In conclusion, administration of opicapone at therapeutic (50 mg) and supratherapeutic (800 mg) doses did not induce a clinically significant prolongation of the QTc interval.