Advertisement Amarin antidepressant performs well in phase IIa - Pharmaceutical Business review
Pharmaceutical Business review is using cookies

ContinueLearn More
Close

Amarin antidepressant performs well in phase IIa

Amarin Corporation has obtained positive data from two exploratory phase IIa clinical studies using Miraxion to treat unresponsive depression. The drug demonstrated a significant clinical action for a sub-group of patients.

In a recent exploratory phase IIa study, Miraxion (formerly referred to as LAX-101c) was used as monotherapy in 77 patients with a new episode of depression in a six-week trial. In this study it was prespecified that the presence of specific depression symptomology (patients with melancholic vegetative symptoms) at the time of entry to the study, would predict response.

In an exploratory analysis the Bech-Depression Scale, a subscale of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, which defines the affective core symptoms of depression, was used as the outcome variable. Miraxion achieved statistical significance over placebo in the sub-group of patients meeting these criteria.

In addition, using identical symptom-specific methodology, statistically significant results were obtained by reanalyzing the dataset from a published randomized placebo controlled study in treatment unresponsive depression, where Miraxion was used as an adjunct therapy with standard depression treatments.

It is estimated that depressed patients with these symptoms may represent approximately 20-30% of all patients with depression.

Amarin filed a patent covering this intellectual property in late 2004 and intends to publish the full results from the monotherapy study later this year.

“The data analyzed from these studies show significant clinical benefit for a specific sub-group of patients with depression, when used as either monotherapy or as adjunct therapy,” commented Rick Stewart, CEO of Amarin. “This data will be an important component in the design of subsequent clinical trials. It will allow us to more accurately target patients with depression that may respond to Miraxion.”