Quote from: twinturbo on May 13, 2014, 12:39:47 AM
I'll go through the numbers and methods of the study later but I'm reading 10 for EpiPen and 20 for Auvi-Q, not 30.Quotebased on median Tmax parameters, peak epinephrine concentrations for EpiPen occurred 10 minutes after dosing (0.170 hours, range 0.07–1.00) while peak concentrations for Auvi-Q occurred 20 minutes after dosing (0.330 hours, range 0.08–1.00)
Quotebased on median Tmax parameters, peak epinephrine concentrations for EpiPen occurred 10 minutes after dosing (0.170 hours, range 0.07–1.00) while peak concentrations for Auvi-Q occurred 20 minutes after dosing (0.330 hours, range 0.08–1.00)
QuoteThe randomized, crossover study included 71 healthy adults. In three sequences over three treatment periods, nurses administered 0.3 mg doses of epineph- rine using Auvi-Q and EpiPen. Blood samples were obtained for pharmacokinetic measurements, and adverse events were assessed.
The peak concentration of and total exposure to epi- nephrine were comparable between the two devices. Both peak plasma concentration and area under the concentration-time curve supported the bioequivalence of epinephrine delivered via Auvi-Q and EpiPen. Treatment-emergent adverse events were almost all mild, and always resolved spontaneously. There was a 13% rate of injection-site pain with Auvi-Q versus 24% with EpiPen. Rates of injection-site bleeding were 5% and 10%, respectively.
The study demonstrates the bioequivalence of 0.3 mg doses of epinephrine administered with the new Auvi-Q devices compared to EpiPen. Safety and tolerability are similar with the 2 devices; Auvi-Q may be associated with less pain and bleeding.