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Dive into the research topics where Verne Pitman is active.

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Featured researches published by Verne Pitman.


Headache | 2007

Eletriptan for the acute treatment of migraine in adolescents: Results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Paul Winner; Steven L. Linder; Richard B. Lipton; Mary Almas; Bruce Parsons; Verne Pitman

Background.—Eletriptan is a potent 5‐HT1B/1D agonist with proven efficacy in the acute treatment of migraine in adults.


Headache | 2003

Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of oral eletriptan for treatment of acute migraine: a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled study conducted in the United States.

Fred D. Sheftell; Robert E. Ryan; Verne Pitman

Objective.—To investigate the efficacy, consistency, safety, and tolerability of oral eletriptan in the acute treatment of three migraine attacks.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2014

Pregabalin long-term treatment and assessment of discontinuation in patients with generalized anxiety disorder

Siegfried Kasper; Celso Iglesias-García; Edward Schweizer; Jacquelyn G. Wilson; Sarah Dubrava; Rita Prieto; Verne Pitman; Lloyd Knapp

Discontinuation effects following cessation of 12 and 24 wk of pregabalin treatment for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) were evaluated in a placebo- and lorazepam-controlled, randomized, double-blind, multicentre trial conducted in 16 countries. The study design consisted of two 12-wk treatment periods (periods 1 and 2), each followed by a 1-wk taper and two post-discontinuation assessments, one immediately following the taper and one 1-wk post-taper. Patients were assigned to receive an initially flexible dose of pregabalin 450-600 mg/d, pregabalin 150-300 mg/d, or lorazepam 3-4 mg/d for 6 wk; responders continued fixed-dose therapy for 6 additional weeks. Patients entering period 2 continued on the same fixed dose or switched to placebo. Discontinuation effects were evaluated with the Physician Withdrawal Checklist (PWC) and reported discontinuation-emergent signs and symptoms. Rebound anxiety was measured with the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale. GAD symptoms improved with all treatments and improvements were maintained over 12 and 24 wk. Low levels of discontinuation symptoms were evident in all treatment groups. For patients who received active treatment during both periods, mean (95% confidence interval) increases on the PWC from last visit on active treatment to the second post-discontinuation assessment were: pregabalin 450-600 mg/d: 2.8 (1.6-3.9), pregabalin 150-300 mg/d: 1.7 (0.7-2.8), lorazepam 3-4 mg/d: 2.2 (1.0-3.5). Rates of rebound anxiety were also low at both 12 and 24 wk (0-6%). This suggests that risk of discontinuation symptoms and rebound anxiety are low for pregabalin after 12 and 24 wk of treatment.


Neurology | 2014

Pregabalin monotherapy in patients with partial-onset seizures: A historical-controlled trial

Jacqueline A. French; Patrick Kwan; Toufic Fakhoury; Verne Pitman; Sarah Dubrava; Lloyd Knapp; Lorraine Yurkewicz

Objective: To assess pregabalin monotherapy for partial-onset seizures using a historical-controlled conversion-to-monotherapy design. Methods: Adults with inadequately controlled partial-onset seizures while receiving 1 or 2 antiepileptic drugs during an 8-week prospective baseline were randomized to double-blind monotherapy with pregabalin 600 or 150 mg/d (4:1) for 20 weeks (8-week conversion and 12-week monotherapy period). The primary endpoint was the seizure-related exit rate for pregabalin 600 mg/d, based on discontinuations due to predefined criteria. Efficacy was declared if the upper limit of the 95% confidence interval for the exit rate was below a historical-control threshold of 74%, with stepwise evaluation using a threshold of 68%. Results: The trial was stopped early for positive efficacy after an interim analysis in 125 patients. The full study population included 161 patients, with 148 evaluable for efficacy. The mean time since epilepsy diagnosis was 14 years. Overall, 54.3% (600 mg/d) and 46.9% (150 mg/d) of patients completed 20 weeks of double-blind treatment. Seizure-related exit rate in the 600 mg/d group (27.5%; 95% confidence interval, 17.8%–37.2%) was significantly below the 74% and 68% thresholds (p < 0.001 for both). Eight patients on 600 mg/d and 2 on 150 mg/d were seizure-free throughout pregabalin monotherapy. Pregabalins overall safety profile was consistent with prior trials. Conclusions: Pregabalin monotherapy was safe and efficacious for patients with inadequately controlled partial-onset seizures. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that patients with inadequately controlled partial-onset seizures switched to pregabalin monotherapy have fewer seizure-related exit events compared with historical controls switched to pseudo-placebo monotherapy.


Epilepsia | 2014

Efficacy and safety of pregabalin versus levetiracetam as adjunctive therapy in patients with partial seizures: A randomized, double‐blind, noninferiority trial

Gaetano Zaccara; Mary Almas; Verne Pitman; Lloyd Knapp; Holly Posner

To assess the comparative efficacy and safety of pregabalin and levetiracetam for the reduction of seizure frequency in patients with partial seizures.


Epilepsia | 2014

Adjunctive use of controlled‐release pregabalin in adults with treatment‐resistant partial seizures: A double‐blind, randomized, placebo‐controlled trial

Jacqueline A. French; Christian Brandt; Daniel Friedman; Victor Biton; Lloyd Knapp; Verne Pitman; Marci L. Chew; Sarah Dubrava; Holly Posner

To assess the efficacy and tolerability of add‐on pregabalin controlled‐release formulation (PGB‐CR) (doses of 165 or 330 mg/day) in patients with partial‐onset seizures (POS).


Cephalalgia | 2010

Quantifying the return of headache in triptan-treated migraineurs: An observational study

Fred D. Sheftell; Mary Almas; Randall Weeks; Ninan T. Mathew; Verne Pitman; Richard B. Lipton

To improve understanding of secondary treatment failure in migraine patients, we evaluated ‘headache return’ as a novel endpoint to assess returning headaches according to their severity, expanding on current standard assessments of overall recurrence or relapse rates, in a six-month observational study of triptan-treated migraineurs. A total of 359 patients (91% female; mean age, 42.5 years) recorded data for 2168 headaches in electronic diaries. Two-thirds of headaches responded to triptan treatment (improved-to-mild or no pain two hours post-dose); 34% of headaches had a pain-free response. By 48 hours post-dose, 19% of all responding headaches returned; 24% of headaches achieving a pain-free response returned, predominantly to mild pain. More severe baseline headache, short duration since diagnosis of migraine, and female gender were associated with increased likelihood of headache return. Treatment satisfaction declined with increasing severity of headache return, demonstrating the value of assessing headache return by severity to fully evaluate its impact.


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 2016

Characteristics of Disturbed Sleep in Patients With Fibromyalgia Compared With Insomnia or With Pain-Free Volunteers.

Thomas Roth; Pritha Bhadra-Brown; Verne Pitman; Timothy Roehrs; E. Malca Resnick

Objective:To investigate the differential nature of disturbed sleep in patients with fibromyalgia (FM) reporting sleep difficulties versus patients with primary insomnia (PI) and patients who do not report disturbed sleep (pain-free controls). Materials and Methods:Patients (FM: n=132; PI: n=109; normals: n=52) were recruited for different studies. FM and PI patients were preselected to meet the sleep disturbance criteria. Patients with sleep or circadian disorders were excluded from all groups. Polysomnography was conducted at screening, during 2 consecutive nights. For this post hoc analysis of polysomnographies, length and frequency (duration, number) of wake and sleep bouts were analyzed, together with traditional sleep measures; a “bout”=consecutive 30-second epochs of sleep or wake. Data are mean±SD. Results:FM and PI patients had decreased total sleep time and slow-wave sleep (SWS), and increased latency to persistent sleep (LPS) and wake time after sleep onset (WASO) versus controls (P<0.05 for each). FM versus PI patients had more SWS (48.1±32.4 vs. 27.2±23.6 min; P<0.0001) and shorter LPS (58.2±29.8 vs. 70.7±31.3 min; P=0.0055), but comparable WASO (107.7±32.8 vs. 108.6±31.5 min). Despite comparable WASO, FM patients had shorter (4.64±2.42 vs. 5.87±3.15 min; P=0.0016) but more frequent wake bouts versus PI patients (41.6±16.7 vs. 35.7±12.6; P=0.0075). Sleep bout duration was similar for FM (9.32±0.35 min) and PI patients (10.1±0.37 min); both populations had shorter sleep bout duration versus controls (15.7±0.7 min; P<0.0001 both). Conclusions:Increased frequency of wake and sleep bouts and decreased wake bout duration, together with decreased LPS and increased SWS, suggests that sleep in FM is characterized by an inability to maintain continuous sleep but a greater sleep drive compared with PI.


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2014

Assessment of sleep in patients with fibromyalgia: qualitative development of the fibromyalgia sleep diary

Leah Kleinman; Sally Mannix; Lesley M. Arnold; Claire Burbridge; Kellee Howard; Kelly McQuarrie; Verne Pitman; Malca Resnick; Tom Roth; Tara Symonds

ObjectivesSleep disturbance is a common experience in fibromyalgia (FM). The field lacks a sleep specific patient reported outcome (PRO) measure developed and validated in a FM population. The study objective is to gain an in-depth understanding of sleep in FM and to develop a PRO measure of it.MethodsResearch involved the following stages: 1) A literature review conducted to identify key concepts associated with FM patient experience of sleep and PRO measures that have been used to assess this; 2) Qualitative interviews with therapeutic area experts; 3) Focus groups with FM patients who experienced sleep disturbance; 4) Development of a conceptual framework and the Fibromyalgia Sleep Diary (FMSD); and 5) Cognitive interviews with patients to explore content validity of the FMSD.ResultsThe literature review and expert interviews supported sleep disturbance being an important aspect of the FM patient experience, and underscored the need for a new FM specific sleep PRO measure. Results from the focus groups demonstrated that FM patients experience sleep disturbances that they attribute to their FM symptoms, such as pain and stiffness, confirming the importance of understanding more about sleep changes. Aspects of sleep raised by FM patients included poor sleep quality and insufficient quantity including difficulty with falling asleep, getting comfortable, and staying asleep; restlessness; light sleep; not feeling rested upon awakening; and difficulty starting the day. Cognitive interview results showed that the 8-item FMSD, developed to reflect the concepts identified above, was relevant to FM patients with content that was interpreted as intended.ConclusionsThe FMSD was developed in line with the recommendations of the FDA PRO guidance and ISPOR PRO Task Force. The qualitative evidence generated thus far strongly supports the content validity of the FMSD as a PRO measure of sleep disturbance in FM populations. Psychometric evaluation of the FMSD to demonstrate reliability, validity and sensitivity to change is recommended as a next step.


Epilepsia | 2014

Safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of pregabalin in children with refractory partial seizures: A phase 1, randomized controlled study

Donald W. Mann; Jing Liu; Marci L. Chew; Howard N. Bockbrader; Christine Alvey; Elizabeth Zegarac; John M. Pellock; Verne Pitman

To evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of pregabalin as adjunctive therapy in children with refractory partial seizures.

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