Co-crystal of tramadol-celecoxib: preclinical and clinical evaluation of a novel analgesic

Pain management is a major unmet need due to the suboptimal efficacy and undesirable side effects of current analgesics. Multimodal therapies recruiting complementary mechanisms of action may help address this. Co-crystals incorporating two active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) constitute an inno...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inExpert opinion on investigational drugs p. 1
Main Authors Gascon, Neus, Almansa, Carmen, Merlos, Manuel, Miguel Vela, José, Encina, Gregorio, Morte, Adelaida, Smith, Kevin, Plata-Salamán, Carlos
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 04.05.2019
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Summary:Pain management is a major unmet need due to the suboptimal efficacy and undesirable side effects of current analgesics. Multimodal therapies recruiting complementary mechanisms of action may help address this. Co-crystals incorporating two active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) constitute an innovative approach to multimodal therapy, particularly if modification of the physicochemical properties of constituent APIs can be translated into clinical benefits. Areas covered: The preclinical and clinical profiles of Co-Crystal of Tramadol-Celecoxib (CTC), a novel API-API co-crystal (1:1 molecular ratio of rac-tramadol.hydrochloride and celecoxib) are described. Expert opinion: CTC may provide a relevant addition to pain therapy due to its: i) unique co-crystal structure conferring differentiated intrinsic dissolution profiles on constituent APIs, ii) modified clinical pharmacokinetics (slower absorption of tramadol and faster absorption of celecoxib) compared with commercially available single-entity reference products (in agreement with modified dissolution rates), iii) superior benefit-risk ratio compared with reference products (suggested by preclinical synergistic antinociceptive effects, without potentiation of adverse effects), and iv) efficacy in a phase 2 trial of moderate to severe pain following extraction of ≥2 impacted third molars requiring bone removal, where CTC doses containing low doses of APIs exerted a significant effect. Phase 3 studies are currently ongoing.
ISSN:1744-7658
DOI:10.1080/13543784.2019.1612557