CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
Phase 1Completed· 21 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Oxcarbazepine (brand name vs generic drugs) +7 moredrug
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Key inclusion· 6
  • Previously completed BEEP2a study and identified as probably bioequivalence-unequal (GB)
  • Age 18–76 years inclusive
  • Confirmed diagnosis of epilepsy (focal or primary generalized)
  • Currently taking at least one eligible study antiepileptic drug
Key exclusion· 6
  • Pregnant or lactating
  • Severe liver impairment (ALT, AST, or total bilirubin ≥10× upper limit of normal)
  • Severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance <30 mL/min by Cockcroft-Gault)
  • History of alcohol or drug abuse that could jeopardize health or compromise study participation

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT02707965
NCT02707965Phase 1Completed

Characterization of Epilepsy Patients At-risk for Adverse Outcomes Related to Switching Antiepileptic Drug Products: BEEP 2b Study

Food and Drug Administration (FDA)·interventional·Posted Mar 14, 2016·Updated Mar 27, 2020

In Brief

A Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating Oxcarbazepine (brand name vs generic drugs), Divalproex Sodium (brand name vs generic drugs), and 6 other interventions for Epilepsy. Completed, enrolled 21 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

Some epilepsy patients are described as GB when they have worsened seizures or side effects related to switching between brand name and generic, or between generic antiepileptic drug (AED) products. In concert with Aim 1 (protocol BEEP2a), this study will uncover possible reasons for patient problems with the drug switching. Factors that will be studied in GB epilepsy patients include physiologic, psychological, and genetic factors, including in this protocol whether brand and generic AEDs are pharmacokinetically similar in GB individuals.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
ConditionsEpilepsy
CountriesUnited States

Timeline

Phase 1CompletedFinished
20162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
First PostedMar 14, 2016
Enrollment StartJun 8, 2017
Primary CompletionAug 30, 2018
Study CompletionSep 4, 2018
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.2 yearsPosted 10.3 years ago

Interventions

Oxcarbazepine (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

Divalproex Sodium (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

Carbamazepine (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

Lamotrigine (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

levetiracetam (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

Topiramate (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

Zonisamide (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.

Phenytoin sodium (brand name vs generic drugs)drug

This is a cross-over replicate study with 2 sequences (arms) comparing brand name and generic anti-epileptic drugs. Subjects will take a brand name and a generic drug of the same intervention. While there are only 2 sequences, there are 8 possible drugs for this study, and a study patient will only take 1 out of 8 study drugs. Only pharmacists will know which sequence each patient is assigned to.