The Real-world Treatment Satisfaction by Gefapixiant in RCC

Last updated: January 26, 2025
Sponsor: Nagoya City University
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Chronic Cough

Treatment

Gefapixant Citrate

Clinical Study ID

NCT06542484
NagoyaCU-RCC
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

Chronic cough has a high global prevalence and it is refractory to such treatments by approximately 20% of patients. Gafapixant is a P2X3 receptor antagonist that has demonstrated the reduction of cough in patients with refractory chronic cough(RCC). Taste disturbance is the most frequent adverse event by gefapixant (approximately 60-70%). Although gefapixant is well-tolerated even if taste disturbance has occurred, the impact of taste disturbance on cough-specific QoL remains to be unclear. Therefore, the investigator would like to evaluate factors related to treatment satisfaction by gefapixant in RCC patients. the investigator hypothesize that taste disturbance will be associated with the improvement of cough specific QoL and treatment satisfaction in RCC patients.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Adult patients with RCC and UCC (8 weeks or more).

  2. Cough is refractory to intensive specific treatments for causes of chronic cough.

  3. Never smokers and ex-smokers with having smoking history of ≤20 pack-years.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients with lung cancer, interstitial lung diseases, bronchiectasis, orrespiratory infection such as tuberculosis and acute pneumonia.

  2. Current smoker, ex-smokers with having smoking history of >20 pack-years, or thosewho quit smoking within six months prior to receiving gefapixant.

  3. Those who are pregnant.

Study Design

Total Participants: 63
Treatment Group(s): 1
Primary Treatment: Gefapixant Citrate
Phase:
Study Start date:
December 04, 2024
Estimated Completion Date:
June 30, 2026

Study Description

Chronic cough has a high global prevalence, but appears to be poorly recognized. Most patients respond to specific treatments against causes of chronic cough. Meanwhile, cough is refractory to such treatments by approximately 20% of patients and they are regarded as "refractory chronic cough (RCC). Gafapixant is a P2X3 receptor antagonist that has demonstrated the reduction of cough in patients with RCC through the inhibition of ATP transmission to afferent nerves. According to the COUGH-1 and COUGH-2, taste disturbance is the most frequent adverse event by gefapixant, with the incidence of 59.3% in COUGH-1 and 68.9% in COUGH-2, respectively. Although 45 mg of gefapixant is well-tolerated even if taste disturbance has occurred, the impact of taste disturbance on cough-specific QoL remains to be unclear in RCC and UCC. Furthermore, both taste disturbance and the improvement of cough by gefapixant would be associated with treatment satisfaction. Therefore, the investigator would like to evaluate factors related to treatment satisfaction by gefapixant in RCC patients. The investigator hypothesize that taste disturbance will be associated with the improvement of cough specific QoL and treatment satisfaction in RCC patients. Furthermore, the investigator would like to evaluate the association of taste disturbance with cough-specific QoL in the real-world clinical practice. In addition, there are no biomarkers available that can predict the efficacy of the improvement of cough by gefapixant. The investigator will also explore biomarkers that can be helpful in predicting well response to gefapixant in RCC and UCC patients.

Connect with a study center

  • Nagoya City University

    Nagoya, Aichi 467-8601
    Japan

    Site Not Available

  • Nagoya City University Hospital

    Nagoya, Aichi 4678601
    Japan

    Active - Recruiting

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