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Feb. 4, 2010
Objective
To assess the potential efficacy and tolerability of levopromazine(methotrimeprazine) in
the treatment of fibromyalgia.
Methods
Unicentre, open-label study conducted in thirty-five outpatients, aged 18 years or older,
who met the ACR criteria for fibromyalgia and had not satisfactorily responded to previous
fibromyalgia treatment. Levopromazine, flexibly dosed (12.5-100 mg/d), was added to the
outpatients' original treatment regimens for 12 weeks. The primary outcome measure was the
mean change from baseline to endpoint in the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) total
score in the intent-to-treat sample. Secondary outcomes included the Clinical Global
Impression (CGI) of Severity scale, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), Beck Depression
Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, 12-Item Short Form Health Survey, and individual
items of the FIQ.
Results
The mean FIQ total score did not decrease significantly at the study endpoint (63.37 SD
11.32 vs. 61.19 SD 9.32, p=0.73). Pain intensity, as evaluated by the Visual Analogue
Scale, remained unchanged at study endpoint (8.5 SD 1.6 vs. 8.2 SD 1.2, p=0.49). A
statistically significant reduction was observed in the PSQI score (15.65 SD 3.33 vs.
12.23 SD 3.79, p<0.001, effect size: 1.03) and the CGI-severity score (4.71 SD 0.64 vs.
4.03 SD 1.01, p<0.002, effect size: 1.06). No significant or relevant changes were seen in
the remaining fibromyalgia symptoms, psychopathological scales or quality-of-life. The
drug was well tolerated.
Conclusion
Despite its efficacy in improving sleep quality, levopromazine does not appear to be a
useful alternative treatment for fibromyalgia.
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