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Dive into the research topics where Karen Reimer is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen Reimer.


European Journal of Pain | 2009

A randomised controlled trial with prolonged-release oral oxycodone and naloxone to prevent and reverse opioid-induced constipation.

Winfried Meissner; Petra Leyendecker; Stefan Mueller-Lissner; Joachim Nadstawek; Michael Hopp; Christian Ruckes; Stefan Wirz; Wolfgang Fleischer; Karen Reimer

Background: Opioid‐induced constipation can have a major negative impact on patients’ quality of life. This randomised, double‐blinded study evaluated the analgesic efficacy of prolonged‐release (PR) oral oxycodone when co‐administered with PR oral naloxone, and its impact on opioid‐induced constipation in patients with severe chronic pain. Another objective was to identify the optimal dose ratio of oxycodone and naloxone.


The Journal of Pain | 2008

Analgesic Efficacy and Safety of Oxycodone in Combination With Naloxone as Prolonged Release Tablets in Patients With Moderate to Severe Chronic Pain

Dana Vondrackova; Petra Leyendecker; Winfried Meissner; Michael Hopp; Istvan Szombati; Kai Hermanns; Christian Ruckes; Susanne Weber; Birgit Grothe; Wolfgang Fleischer; Karen Reimer

UNLABELLED This randomized, double-blind, placebo- and active-controlled, parallel-group study was designed to demonstrate the superiority of oxycodone in combination with naloxone in a prolonged release (PR) formulation over placebo with respect to analgesic efficacy. The active control group was included for sensitivity and safety analyses, and furthermore to compare the analgesic efficacy and bowel function of oxycodone PR/naloxone PR with oxycodone PR alone. The analgesic efficacy was measured as the time from the initial dose of study medication to multiple pain events (ie, inadequate analgesia) in patients with moderate to severe chronic low back pain. The full analysis population consisted of 463 patients. The times to recurrent pain events were significantly longer in the oxycodone PR/naloxone PR group compared with placebo (P < .0001-.0003); oxycodone PR/naloxone PR reduced the risk of pain events by 42% (P < .0001; full analysis population). The appearance of pain events was comparable for oxycodone PR/naloxone PR versus oxycodone PR, confirming that the addition of naloxone PR to oxycodone PR in a combination tablet did not negatively affect analgesic efficacy of the opioid. Furthermore, oxycodone PR/naloxone PR offers benefits in terms of an improvement in bowel function. In a therapeutic area of great unmet need, therefore, the combination tablet of oxycodone PR/naloxone PR offers patients effective analgesia while improving opioid-induced bowel dysfunction. Taken together with the observation that the safety profile of oxycodone PR/naloxone PR is consistent with that expected from other opioid analgesics except opioid-induced constipation, these findings indicate that the addition of naloxone to oxycodone in a PR combination tablet offers improved tolerability. Oxycodone PR/naloxone PR is therefore a promising new treatment approach for the management of chronic pain. PERSPECTIVE This study evaluated the analgesic efficacy and safety of the combination of oxycodone PR/naloxone PR in chronic nonmalignant pain. Opioids are often reduced in dosage or even discontinued as a result of impaired bowel function, leading to insufficient pain treatment. Not only does oxycodone PR/naloxone PR demonstrate analgesic efficacy comparable with oxycodone PR, but it also improves opioid-induced bowel dysfunction, and may therefore improve the acceptability of long-term opioid treatment for chronic pain.


Lancet Neurology | 2013

Prolonged release oxycodone–naloxone for treatment of severe restless legs syndrome after failure of previous treatment: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial with an open-label extension

Claudia Trenkwalder; Heike Benes; Ludger Grote; Diego Garcia-Borreguero; Birgit Högl; Michael Hopp; Björn Bosse; Alexander Oksche; Karen Reimer; Juliane Winkelmann; Richard P. Allen; Ralf Kohnen

BACKGROUND Opioids are a potential new treatment for severe restless legs syndrome. We investigated the efficacy and safety of a fixed-dose combination of prolonged release oxycodone-naloxone for patients with severe restless legs syndrome inadequately controlled by previous, mainly dopaminergic, treatment. METHODS This multicentre study consisted of a 12-week randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial and 40-week open-label extension phase done at 55 sites in Austria, Germany, Spain, and Sweden. Patients had symptoms for at least 6 months and an International RLS Study Group severity rating scale sum score of at least 15; patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or a history of sleep apnoea syndrome were excluded. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to either study drug or matched placebo with a validated interactive response technology system in block sizes of four. Study drug was oxycodone 5·0 mg, naloxone 2·5 mg, twice per day, which was up-titrated according to investigators opinion to a maximum of oxycodone 40 mg, naloxone 20 mg, twice per day; in the extension, all patients started on oxycodone 5·0 mg, naloxone 2·5 mg, twice per day, which was up-titrated to a maximum of oxycodone 40 mg, naloxone 20 mg, twice per day. The primary outcome was mean change in severity of symptoms according to the International RLS Study Group severity rating scale sum score at 12 weeks. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (number NCT01112644) and with EudraCT (number 2009-011107-23). FINDINGS We screened 495 patients, of whom 306 were randomly assigned and 276 included in the primary analysis (132 to prolonged release oxycodone-naloxone vs 144 to placebo). 197 patients participated in the open-label extension. Mean International RLS Study Group rating scale sum score at randomisation was 31·6 (SD 4·5); mean change after 12 weeks was -16·5 (SD 11·3) in the prolonged release oxycodone-naloxone group and -9·4 (SD 10·9) in the placebo group (mean difference between groups at 12 weeks 8·15, 95% CI 5·46-10·85; p<0·0001). After the extension phase, mean sum score was 9·7 (SD 7·8). Treatment-related adverse events occurred in 109 of 150 (73%) patients in the prolonged release oxycodone-naloxone group and 66 of 154 (43%) in the placebo group during the double-blind phase; during the extension phase, 112 of 197 (57%) had treatment-related adverse events. Five of 306 (2%) patients had serious treatment-related adverse events when taking prolonged release oxycodone-naloxone (vomiting with concurrent duodenal ulcer, constipation, subileus, ileus, acute flank pain). INTERPRETATION Prolonged release oxycodone-naloxone was efficacious for short-term treatment of patients with severe restless legs syndrome inadequately controlled with previous treatment and the safety profile was as expected. Our study also provides evidence of open-label long-term efficacy of this treatment. Opioids can be used to treat patients with severe restless legs syndrome who have had no benefit with first-line drugs. FUNDING Mundipharma Research.


Pharmacology | 2009

Meeting the Challenges of Opioid-Induced Constipation in Chronic Pain Management – A Novel Approach

Karen Reimer; Michael Hopp; M. Zenz; Christoph Maier; Peter Holzer; Gerd Mikus; Bjoern Bosse; Kevin Smith; Catharina Buschmann-Kramm; Petra Leyendecker

Opioid analgesics are the cornerstone of pain management for moderate-to-severe cancer pain and, increasingly, chronic noncancer pain. Despite proven analgesic efficacy, the use of opioids is commonly associated with frequently dose-limiting constipation that seriously impacts on patients’ quality of life. Agents currently used to manage opioid-induced constipation (OIC), such as laxatives, do not address the underlying opioid receptor-mediated cause of constipation and are often ineffective. A significant need therefore exists for more effective treatment options. A novel approach for selectively and locally antagonizing the gastrointestinal effects of opioids involves the coadministration of a μ-opioid receptor antagonist with negligible systemic availability, such as oral naloxone. Combination therapy with prolonged-release (PR) oxycodone plus PR naloxone has been shown to provide effective analgesia while preventing or reducing constipation. The current article highlights this novel strategy in its potential to significantly improve the quality of life of patients suffering from chronic pain, affording patients the benefit of full analgesia, without the burden of OIC.


Dermatology | 1997

Povidone-Iodine to Prevent Mucositis in Patients during Antineoplastic Radiochemotherapy

R. Rahn; I.A. Adamietz; H.-D. Boettcher; V. Schaefer; Karen Reimer; W. Fleischer

In an open study, the efficacy of povidone-iodine in the prophylaxis of mucositis during antineoplastic radiochemotherapy was determined. 40 patients were randomly assigned to a treatment or control group (each 20 patients). All patients received standard prophylaxis of mucositis with nystatin, dexpanthenol, rutoside and immunoglobulin. In addition, the patients of the treatment group performed 4 times daily rinsing with povidone-iodine, the control patients with sterile water. Clinical examination of the oral mucosa was performed weekly during the radiation period and up to 6 weeks after the end of therapy. Oral mucositis was observed in 14 patients of the treatment group (mean grading: 1.0) and in all 20 patients of the control group (mean grading: 3.0). The mean onset of mucositis was after 2.25 weeks in treatment patients and 1.5 weeks in control patients. The mean total duration of mucositis was 2.75 weeks in treatment patients and 9.25 weeks in control patients. The mean AUC values were 2.5 in treatment patients and 15.75 in control patients. All findings were statistically significantly different between the two groups. It is concluded that rinsing with povidone-iodine reduces the incidence, severity and duration of oral mucositis during antineoplastic radiochemotherapy.


BMC Clinical Pharmacology | 2010

Efficacy and safety of combined prolonged-release oxycodone and naloxone in the management of moderate/severe chronic non-malignant pain: results of a prospectively designed pooled analysis of two randomised, double-blind clinical trials

Oliver Löwenstein; Petra Leyendecker; Eberhard Albert Lux; Mark Blagden; Karen H. Simpson; Michael Hopp; Björn Bosse; Karen Reimer

BackgroundTwo randomised 12-week, double-blind, parallel-group, multicenter studies comparing oxycodone PR/naloxone PR and oxycodone PR alone on symptoms of opioid-induced bowel dysfunction in patients with moderate/severe non-malignant pain have been conducted.MethodsThese studies were prospectively designed to be pooled and the primary outcome measure of the pooled data analysis was to demonstrate non-inferiority in 12-week analgesic efficacy of oxycodone PR/naloxone PR versus oxycodone PR alone. Patients with opioid-induced constipation were switched to oxycodone PR and then randomised to fixed doses of oxycodone PR/naloxone PR (n = 292) or oxycodone PR (n = 295) for 12 weeks (20-80 mg/day).ResultsNo statistically significant differences in analgesic efficacy were observed for the two treatments (p = 0.3197; non-inferiority p < 0.0001; 95% CI -0.07, 0.23) and there was no statistically significant difference in frequency of analgesic rescue medication use. Improvements in Bowel Function Index score were observed for oxycodone PR/naloxone PR by Week 1 and at every subsequent time point (-15.1; p < 0.0001; 95% CI -17.3, -13.0). AE incidence was similar for both groups (61.0% and 57.3% of patients with oxycodone PR/naloxone PR and oxycodone PR alone, respectively).ConclusionsResults of this pooled analysis confirm that oxycodone PR/naloxone PR provides effective analgesia and suggest that oxycodone PR/naloxone PR improves bowel function without compromising analgesic efficacy.Trial registration numbersClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00412100 and NCT00412152


Wound Repair and Regeneration | 2001

POLYVINYL PYRROLIDONE‐IODINE LIPOSOME HYDROGEL IMPROVES EPITHELIALIZATION BY COMBINING MOISTURE AND ANTISEPIS. A NEW CONCEPT IN WOUND THERAPY

P. M. Vogt; J. Hauser; Oliver Rossbach; Bjoern Bosse; Wolfgang Fleischer; Han-Ulrich Steinau; Karen Reimer

Moist treatment of wounds has been shown to improve epithelialization, however at an increased risk of bacterial infection. In this monocentric, randomized, open, phase II pilot study of polyvinyl pyrrolidone‐iodine, a well‐established topical antiseptic was tested in a new liposomal complexed form in patients receiving meshed skin grafts after burns or reconstructive procedures. Mesh skin graft sites of 36 patients were dressed either with the new polyvinyl‐pyrrolidone‐iodine liposome hydrogel formulation (Betasom hydrogel) (n= 21), or chlorhexidine‐gauze (n= 15). After the first dressing change, wounds were assessed daily and documented every other day until they were healed. Methods of analysis included clinical assessment, photoplanimetry (rate of epithelialization), impedance measurement (moisture of surface and wound healing quality), patients assessment of pain and other sensations, and thyroid hormones (T3, T4, and TSH). The rate of epithelialization was improved with Betasom hydrogel compared to chlorhexidine‐gauze on day 11 (96.3% vs. 75.9%p= 0.056) and significantly on day 13 (100% vs. 82.3%p= 0.005), respectively. Impedance measurements showed an earlier return to normal values (day 9) in Betasom‐hydrogel–treated wounds as opposed to chlorhexidine treatment (day 11). Clinical assessment indicated significantly better antiseptic efficacy (p= 0.002) and wound healing quality (p= 0.004) of Betasom hydrogel. Graft loss occurred at a significantly lower rate in Betasom treatment (n= 1; 5%), than in chlorhexidine treatment (n= 5; 35.7%) (p= 0.001). No relevant adverse events or clinically relevant changes of thyroid hormones were observed with Betasom hydrogel. The rationale of this new polyvinyl pyrrolidone‐iodine liposomal formulation was based on the properties of liposomes that provide higher moisture to the wound surface, release PVP‐iodine at a low rate, and target the substance more exactly by interaction with the cell surface. These initial clinical results show earlier epithelialization and better healing in wounds treated with polyvinyl pyrrolidone‐iodine liposome hydrogel, which combines moisture and antisepsis, compared to wounds treated with a conventional antiseptic chlorhexidine‐gauze.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 1998

Prophylaxis with povidone-iodine against induction of oral mucositis by radiochemotherapy.

I.A. Adamietz; Rainer Rahn; Heinz D. Böttcher; V. Schäfer; Karen Reimer; Wolfgang Fleischer

Oral mucositis is a frequent complication of radiochemotherapy. The origin of radiation-induced mucosal lesions is iatrogenic in nature, although further development of mucositis is essentially influenced by infection. It can be assumed that disinfection measures should decrease the severity of mucositis induced by radiochemotherapy. Therefore, in a prospective randomised study the efficacy of prophylactic oral rinsing with a disinfection agent was investigated. A randomised, prospective comparative trial was conducted with 40 patients undergoing radiochemotherapy of the head and neck region because of malignant disease. The treatment scheme consisted of irradiation to the tumour region and adjacent lymph nodes, with a total dose of 71.3 Gy, and simultaneous chemotherapy with carboplatin (60 mg/m2) on days 1–5 and 29–34. In all patients mucositis prophylaxis with nystatin, rutosides, panthenol and immunoglobulin was undertaken. In addition, 20 patients rinsed the oral cavity 4 times daily with povidone-iodine solution, while the group for comparison rinsed with sterile water. Clinical examination of the oral mucosa was performed weekly. Onset, grading and duration of mucositis were used as the main variables. Clinically manifest oral mucositis was observed in 14 patients in the iodine group (mean grading: 1.0) and in all 20 patients in the control group (mean grading: 3.0). The total duration (mean) of clinically observed mucositis was 2.75 weeks in treatment patients and 9.25 weeks in control patients. Median AUC (area under curve for grade vs duration) was 2.5 in the iodine rinsing patients and 15.75 in control patients. All differences found between the two groups were statistically significant. Increased iodine incorporation was not observed. A pathologic rise in thyroid hormone levels was not found in the iodine group. The results obtained indicate that incidence, severity and duration of radiochemotherapy-induced mucositis can be significantly reduced by oral rinsing with povidone-iodine in addition to the standard prophylaxis scheme. It can be concluded that rinsing with povidone-iodine is an easy, cheap and safe prophylactic method and can be recommended as a supportive treatment during antineoplastic treatment of the head and neck region.


Clinical Therapeutics | 2008

Single- and multiple-dose pharmacokinetic evaluation of oxycodone and naloxone in an opioid agonist/antagonist prolonged-release combination in healthy adult volunteers

Kevin John Smith; Michael Hopp; Gill Mundin; Petra Leyendecker; Paul Bailey; Birgit Grothe; Reiner Uhl; Karen Reimer

BACKGROUND There is an increasing body of evidence supporting the need for prophylactic management of the adverse events (AEs) associated with long-term opioid use in patients with chronic pain. Symptoms of bowel dysfunction, such as constipation, may have a significant impact on a patients quality of life and willingness to continue opioid therapy, and therefore should be managed proactively to ensure that the patient can continue effective pain management. The fixed-dose combination (FDC) prolonged-release (PR) oxycodone/naloxone (OXN) may be an effective therapeutic approach to delivering analgesia, with a reduced risk for opioid-induced constipation. OBJECTIVE The aim of this paper was to report the pharmacokinetic results from a single-dose study and a multiple-dose bioequivalence study of OXN versus separate formulations of oxycodone PR and naloxone PR administered concurrently in healthy subjects. METHODS Both studies were open-label, randomized crossover studies in healthy adult male and female subjects. In the single-dose study, subjects were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 treatment groups: OXN FDC (44 x 10/55-mg, 2 x 20/110-mg, or 1 x 40/20-mg dose strength [each given at a total combined dose of 40/220 mg]) or oxycodone PR 40 mg + naloxone PR 20 mg given in separate formulations. In the multiple-dose study, 34 subjects were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 treatment groups: OXN FDC 40/20 mg, oxycodone PR 40 mg, or naloxone PR 20 mg. Treatments were considered bioequivalent if the 90% CIs for relative bioavailability calculations fell within a predetermined range of 80% to 125%. AEs were assessed by the investigator at each study visit. RESULTS The single-dose study included 28 subjects (22 men, 6 women; mean [SD] age, 32.3 [5.44] years; weight, 75.5 [9.3] kg; and body mass index [BMI], 24.2 [2.5] kg/mm(2)). The mean plasma oxycodone concentration-time curves for OXN and oxycodone PR + naloxone PR were similar. With oxycodone, the mean (SD) AUC(t) values with OXN 10/5, 20/10, and 40/20 mg and oxycodone PR + naloxone PR were 473.49 (72.16), 491.22 (82.18), 488.89 (91.04), and 502.28 (84.13) ng . h/mL, respectively; mean C(max) values were 34.91 (4.36), 35.73 (4.93), 34.46 (5.03), and 40.45 (4.71) ng/mL. For naloxone-3-glucuronide (the primary analyte of naloxone), the mean (SD) AUC(t) values with OXN 10/5, 20/10, and 40/20 mg and oxycodone PR + naloxone PR were 539.93 (142.24), 522.45 (128.57), 520.10 (133.18), and 523.37 (119.75) ng . h/mL, respectively; mean C(max) values were 62.01 (15.96), 63.62 (19.51), 61.95 (18.37), and 63.55 (16.75) ng/mL. There were no statistically significant differences between the treatments, and each of the treatment comparisons resulted in 90% CIs within the range for bioequivalence. The multiple-dose steady-state bioequivalence study included 34 subjects (28 men, 6 women; mean [SD] age, 36 [9.4] years; weight,78.9 [11.7] kg; and BMI, 24.6 [1.9] kg/m(2)). No significant differences were observed between the treatments, with the exception of naloxone-3-glucuronide C(min,ss) values. Mean C(min,ss) values of 22.6 and 24.0 ng/mL were obtained for the OXN combination and naloxone PR tablet, respectively. In the multiple-dose study, the most frequently reported AEs with OXN,oxycodone PR, and naloxone PR were headache (7%, 26%, and 17%, respectively), anorexia (10%, 16%, and 13%), and nausea (10%, 13%, and 7%). CONCLUSIONS The results from the single-dose study were consistent with the regulatory definition of bioequivalence of the FDCs and single components across the range of doses administered. The pharmacokinetic properties of the OXN FDC were similar to those of oxycodone PR + naloxone PR given as separate formulations, based on the regulatory definition. These findings were consistent with the results of the multiple-dose steady-state bioequivalence study. In this population of healthy volunteers, the pharmacokinetic properties of oxycodone apparently were not significantly influenced by administering oxycodone in a combination product, and the availability of naloxone-3-glucuronide from OXN was similar to that from the naloxone PR tablet. These findings suggest that the coadministration of oxycodone PR and naloxone PR in an FDC would not significantly affect the bioavailability of either of its constituents in these subjects.


Dermatology | 1997

Effects of Betaisodona® on Parameters of Host Defense

Brigitte König; Karen Reimer; W. Fleischer; Wolfgang König

The numbers of patients in intensive care units, with immunosuppression, and of elderly people increase in parallel with antibiotic-resistant microorganisms. Therefore the demand for an effective antisepsis increases. Moreover, it became evident that the pathophysiology and the outcome of infection are dependent on the properties of the microorganisms, e.g. synthesis of endo- and exotoxins, and on the host defense, the immune system. In addition to the microbicidal action, we studied the effects of povidone-iodine (PVP-I, Betaisodona) on the generation, release and activity of exotoxins (alpha-hemolysin, phospholipase C, lipase), as well as on granulocyte-derived tissue-destructive enzymes (elastase, beta-glucuronidase) and microbial-induced cytokine generation from human neutrophils. Our results clearly show that PVP-I does not only kill a wide range of bacteria but also inhibits the generation and release of bacterial exotoxins; furthermore, it also inactivates bacterial exotoxins as well as granulocyte-derived tissue-destructive enzymes and cytokines. These data support the usefulness and efficacy of PVP-I as an effective therapeutic agent to combat infection.

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I.A. Adamietz

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Rainer Rahn

Goethe University Frankfurt

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V. Schäfer

Goethe University Frankfurt

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H.D. Böttcher

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Peter Holzer

Medical University of Graz

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