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dexmedetomidine-dmts-nct06052254
Dexmedetomidine DMTS Phase 2 (NCT06052254)
Overview
Dexmedetomidine DMTS Phase 2 (NCT06052254)
Overview
Dexmedetomidine transdermal system (DMTS) is a novel transdermal formulation of dexmedetomidine, an alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonist, being developed by Teikoku Pharma for the treatment of agitation in Alzheimer's disease. This Phase 2 trial (NCT06052254) represents a novel approach to managing behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) using a non-oral delivery system.
The development of DMTS addresses a significant unmet need in Alzheimer's disease care: effective, well-tolerated treatment for agitation that avoids the risks associated with antipsychotics and other sedating medications. By leveraging the established pharmacology of dexmedetomidine with innovative transdermal delivery, this approach may offer a safer alternative for managing one of the most distressing symptoms of dementia.
Trial Details
| Parameter | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| NCT Number | NCT06052254 |
| Phase | Phase 2 |
| Sponsor | Teikoku Pharma Inc. |
| Indication | Agitation associated with Alzheimer's disease |
| Enrollment | 150 participants |
| Status | Recruiting |
| Delivery Method | Transdermal patch |
| Study Design | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled |
| Treatment Duration | 12-16 weeks |
| Primary Endpoint | Change in Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI) |
| Start Date | 2024 |
| Expected Completion | 2026 |
Treatment Arms
| Arm | Intervention | Dose | Route |
|-----|-------------|------|-------|
| 1 | Dexmedetomidine DMTS | Low dose | Transdermal |
| 2 | Dexmedetomidine DMTS | High dose | Transdermal |
| 3 | Placebo | N/A | Transdermal |
The trial employs a dose-escalation design to identify optimal dosing with acceptable tolerability.
Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia
Prevalence and Impact
Agitation is one of the most common and challenging behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), affecting up to 70% of Alzheimer's patients during disease progression[@lyketsos2006]. The term "agitation" encompasses a range of behaviors:
Agitation Behaviors Include:
- Physical aggression: Hitting, kicking, pushing, biting
- Verbal aggression: Yelling, screaming, threatening
- Repetitive behaviors: Pacing, wandering, hoarding
- Restlessness: Inability to sit still, fidgeting
- Resistance to care: Refusing medication, bathing, eating
- Accelerated disease progression
- Reduced quality of life
- Increased hospitalization risk
- Caregiver burnout and depression
- Premature institutionalization
- High healthcare costs
Current Treatment Limitations
The current pharmacotherapeutic options for AD agitation have significant limitations[@kales2014]:
| Current Options | Limitations |
|-----------------|-------------|
| Atypical antipsychotics | Black box warning for mortality; efficacy marginal; stroke risk |
| Benzodiazepines | Cognitive worsening; fall risk; dependence; paradoxical agitation |
| SSRIs | Delayed onset (weeks); GI side effects; QT prolongation |
| Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors | Modest efficacy; GI intolerance; limited BPSD benefit |
| Memantine | Minimal effect on agitation |
Antipsychotic Concerns:
- 2-fold increased mortality risk in dementia patients
- Cardiovascular adverse events
- Extrapyramidal symptoms
- Cognitive worsening
- Sedation and falls
This therapeutic gap creates urgent need for novel, safer interventions.
Mechanism of Action
Dexmedetomidine Pharmacology
Dexmedetomidine is a highly selective alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonist with the following pharmacological properties[@ahmed2020]:
Receptor Binding Profile:
- α2A receptors: High affinity (Ki ~1 nM) - primary mediator of sedation and anxiolysis
- α2B receptors: Moderate affinity - mediates analgesic effects
- α2C receptors: Moderate affinity - role in cognitive function
- α1 receptor affinity: Very low (Ki ~500 nM) - minimal autonomic effects
- Sedation: Produces "cooperative sedation" through activation of α2A receptors in the locus coeruleus; patients can be aroused and are cooperative
- Anxiolysis: Reduces anxiety through modulation of amygdala activity and noradrenergic signaling
- Analgesia: Enhances analgesic efficacy while reducing opioid requirements
- Sympatholysis: Reduces sympathetic outflow, lowering heart rate and blood pressure
- Anti-agitation: Reduces agitation through noradrenergic modulation
Noradrenergic Dysfunction in AD Agitation
The rationale for dexmedetomidine in AD agitation is rooted in the noradrenergic dysfunction seen in Alzheimer's disease[@tan2020]:
Noradrenergic Changes in AD:
- Locus coeruleus degeneration: Early and prominent in AD (Braak stage 1)
- Norepinephrine dysregulation: Both deficiency and paradoxical hyperactivity
- Receptor alterations: α2A receptor changes affect sedation and arousal
- Agitation correlation: Noradrenergic dysfunction correlates with agitation severity
- α2 agonist reduces excessive noradrenergic output
- Normalizes locus coeruleus activity
- Reduces behavioral dysregulation
- May protect remaining neurons
Transdermal Delivery Advantages
The transdermal formulation offers several advantages over oral dexmedetomidine[@gerge2021]:
- Bypasses hepatic first-pass metabolism
- More stable plasma concentrations
- Reduced peak-related hypotension and sedation
- Provides consistent drug exposure over 24 hours
- Reduces peaks and troughs
- Improved tolerability profile
- Non-oral delivery useful for patients with dysphagia
- Addresses medication refusal in dementia
- Once-daily application
- Avoids injection while maintaining continuous delivery
- No need for IV access or monitoring
- Suitable for outpatient settings
- Matrix-type patch design
- 24-hour wear duration
- Controlled drug release
- Skin-friendly adhesive
Clinical Development
Preclinical Foundation
Dexmedetomidine has extensive clinical experience supporting its use:
- ICU sedation: Dexmedetomidine (Precedex®) approved for ICU sedation since 1999
- Post-operative sedation: Widely used in surgical settings
- Geriatric use: Off-label use in elderly patients including those with dementia
- BPSD management: Published case series and retrospective analyses
- Dexmedetomidine shows efficacy in ICU delirium prevention[@dexmedetomidine2019]
- Case reports describe benefit in dementia-related agitation
- Retrospective analyses suggest acceptable tolerability
- No QT prolongation or significant cardiac effects
Trial Design (Phase 2)
The Phase 2 trial follows a rigorous randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled design:
Primary Endpoint:
- Change in Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI)[@cohen1991]
- Assessed at baseline, week 4, week 8, and end of treatment
- Caregiver-rated instrument specifically for agitation
- Safety and tolerability assessments
- Pharmacokinetic profiling
- Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) change
- Quality of life measures (QoL-AD)
- Caregiver burden (Zarit Burden Interview)
- Concomitant medication use
- Diagnosis of probable AD (NIA-AA criteria)
- Clinically significant agitation (CMAI ≥ 45)
- MMSE 10-24 (moderate dementia)
- Stable cholinesterase inhibitor/memantine use allowed
- Excludes uncontrolled medical conditions
Development Timeline
| Milestone | Status |
|-----------|--------|
| Preclinical formulation | Completed |
| Phase 1 PK/safety | Completed |
| Phase 2 initiation | 2024 |
| Phase 2 completion | 2026 (expected) |
| Phase 3 planning | Future |
| Potential approval | 2028-2029 |
Competitive Landscape
Agitation in Alzheimer's disease represents a significant unmet need with several competitors in development:
| Drug | Company | Mechanism | Stage |
|------|---------|-----------|-------|
| KarXT | Karuna/Bristol Myers | M1/M4 muscarinic agonist | Approved (COBENFY™) |
| Nabilone | Corcept Therapeutics | CB1 agonist | Phase 2 |
| Masupirdine | Suven Life Sciences | 5-HT6 antagonist | Phase 2 |
| AVD-104 | Avid Radiopharmaceuticals | Sigma-2 modulator | Phase 2 |
| Brexpiprazole | Otsuka | 5-HT1A/D2 partial agonist | Phase 3 |
| Dexmedetomidine DMTS | Teikoku Pharma | α2-agonist (transdermal) | Phase 2 |
Competitive Positioning
Dexmedetomidine DMTS Advantages:
Challenges:
Therapeutic Potential
Patient Population
The target patient population includes:
- Mild-to-moderate AD: MMSE 10-24
- Clinically significant agitation: CMAI score ≥ 45
- **Inadequate response or intolerance to non-pharmacological interventions
- Contraindications to antipsychotics or preference to avoid
- Difficulty with oral medications: Dysphagia, refusal
Benefits for Caregivers
If successful, DMTS could provide:
- Reduced caregiver burden from agitation episodes
- Improved quality of life for both patient and caregiver
- Reduced need for emergency interventions
- Delayed institutionalization
- Better sleep for caregivers (no nighttime agitation)
Health Economic Impact
AD agitation has substantial costs:
- Annual cost: $29,000+ per patient with agitation vs. $14,000 without
- Hospitalizations: Agitation increases hospitalization risk 3-fold
- Institutionalization: Leading cause of nursing home placement
- Caregiver costs: Time, lost wages, health effects
Effective treatment could reduce these costs significantly.
Safety Considerations
Expected Adverse Events
Based on dexmedetomidine's known profile:
- Common: Sedation, dry mouth, hypotension, bradycardia
- Manageable: Dose-related and titratable
- Temporary: Usually resolve with dose adjustment or discontinuation
Contraindications and Precautions
- Hypersensitivity: To dexmedetomidine or patch components
- Severe cardiac disease: Caution in heart failure, conduction disease
- Concurrent sedatives: Additive CNS depression
- Liver impairment: May require dose adjustment
Monitoring Requirements
- Vital signs (blood pressure, heart rate)
- Sedation assessment
- Application site inspection
- Concomitant medication review
Future Directions
Phase 3 Planning
If Phase 2 is successful, Phase 3 would likely:
- Enroll larger patient populations (300-500 participants)
- Compare multiple dose levels
- Include longer treatment periods (6+ months)
- Evaluate maintenance of effect
Combination Approaches
Potential future strategies:
- Combined with non-pharmacological interventions
- Adjunct to cholinesterase inhibitors
- As-needed vs. maintenance dosing
- Integration into comprehensive BPSD management
Regulatory Pathway
- FDA: Breakthrough Therapy designation possible
- EMA: Parallel scientific advice recommended
- Accelerated approval: Based on CMAI as validated endpoint
Cross-Links
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia](/mechanisms/bpsd-neurobiology)
- [Alpha-2 Adrenergic Signaling](/mechanisms/adrenergic-signaling)
- [Agitation in Dementia](/clinical-trials/karxt-nct06585787-ad-agitation)
- [Locus Coeruleus](/brain-regions/locus-coeruleus)
- [Noradrenergic System](/mechanisms/noradrenergic-neurodegeneration)
- [Non-Pharmacological BPSD Interventions](/therapeutics/bpsd-non-pharmacological)
External Links
- [ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06052254](https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06052254)
- [Teikoku Pharma](https://www.teikoku-pharma.co.jp/en/)
- [Precedex (dexmedetomidine) Prescribing Information](https://www.hospira.com/)
- [Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory](https://www.alz.org/)
- [PubMed](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
- [KEGG Pathways](https://www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway.html)
References
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