Background
Patients and clinicians share
concerns that generic drug substitution might lead to loss of efficacy
or emergence of adverse events. In this trial, we assessed US Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) bioequivalence standards by studying the
effects of switching between two disparate generic immediate-release
lamotrigine products in patients with epilepsy.
Methods
The
Equivalence among Generic Antiepileptic Drugs (EQUIGEN) chronic-dose
study was a randomised, double-blind, crossover study that enrolled
adults (aged ≥18 years) with epilepsy from six epilepsy centres at
academic institutions across the USA who were receiving
immediate-release lamotrigine dosed at 100 mg, 200 mg, 300 mg, or 400 mg
twice daily. Eligible patients were randomly allocated (1:1) to one of
two treatment sequences (sequence 1 or sequence 2), comprising four
study periods of 14 days each. During each 14-day treatment period,
patients received balanced doses of an oral generic lamotrigine product
every 12 h (200–800 mg total, identical to lamotrigine dose prior to
study enrolment); after each 14-day period, patients were crossed over
to receive the other generic product. Computer-based randomisation was
done using random permuted blocks of size two or four for each site to
prevent sequence predictability. Both patients and study personnel were
masked to the generic products selected, their predicted exposure (ie,
“high” vs “low”), and their group allocation. The primary
outcome of this trial was bioequivalence between the generic products,
which was assessed at the end of the study through a comparison of
maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) and area under the
concentration–time curve (AUC) for each product in the analysis
population (all patients who completed all four treatment periods).
Bioequivalence was established if the 90% CIs of the ratios of these two
parameters for the two products were within equivalence limits
(80–125%) in the analysis population. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov\, number NCT01713777.
Findings
Between
April 25, 2013, and Aug 12, 2014, 35 eligible patients were enrolled
and randomly assigned to treatment sequence 1 (n=15) or treatment
sequence 2 (n=20). 33 patients completed all four treatment periods and
were included in the primary outcome analysis. The 90% CIs of the ratios
of both Cmax and AUC were within equivalence limits (AUC 90% CI 98–103, Cmax
90% CI 99–105), showing that lamotrigine exposures were equivalent
between the generic products. No significant changes in seizure
frequency or adverse events were recorded. No deaths, study-related
serious adverse events, or changes in clinical laboratory values or
vital signs occurred during this study.
Interpretation
Disparate
generic lamotrigine products in patients with epilepsy showed
bioequivalence with no detectable difference in clinical effects,
confirming that US Food and Drug Administration bioequivalence standards
are appropriate.
Lancet Neurology 2016
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