Comparison of fesoterodine and tolterodine extended release for the treatment of
overactive bladder: a head-to-head placebo-controlled trial.
Author(s): Herschorn S(1), Swift S, Guan Z, Carlsson M, Morrow JD, Brodsky M, Gong J.
Affiliation(s): Author information:
(1)Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Division of Urology, University of Toronto,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada. s.herschorn@utoronto.ca
Publication date & source: 2010, BJU Int. , 105(1):58-66
OBJECTIVE: To compare the efficacy and tolerability of fesoterodine 8 mg with
tolterodine extended-release (ER) 4 mg and placebo in a randomized clinical trial
of patients with an overactive bladder (OAB).
PATIENTS AND METHODS: In this 12-week double-blind, double-dummy,
placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial, eligible patients reported OAB
symptoms for > or = 3 months and recorded > or = 8 voids and > or = 1 urgency
urinary incontinence (UUI) episode per 24 h in 3-day bladder diaries at baseline.
Patients were randomized in a 2:2:1 ratio to fesoterodine (4 mg for 1 week then 8
mg for 11 weeks); tolterodine ER 4 mg; or placebo (with sham dose escalation for
tolterodine ER and placebo). Endpoints were changes from baseline to week 12 in
UUI episodes (primary endpoint), total and nocturnal voids, urgency episodes,
severe urgency episodes, and frequency-urgency sum per 24 h; mean voided volume
per void (MVV); and the OAB questionnaire (OAB-q), Patient Perception of Bladder
Condition (PPBC), and Urgency Perception Scale (UPS). Safety and tolerability
were assessed and summarized over the 12-week study period.
RESULTS: Fesoterodine (636 patients) significantly improved UUI episodes at week
12 (primary endpoint) compared with tolterodine ER (641 patients; P = 0.017) and
placebo (313 patients; P < 0.001). Fesoterodine also produced significantly
greater improvements than tolterodine ER in MVV (P = 0.005). Fesoterodine
significantly improved all diary endpoints compared with placebo (P < 0.001),
except for nocturnal voids (P = 0.327). Tolterodine ER significantly improved all
diary endpoints vs placebo (P < 0.001), except for nocturnal voids (P = 0.506)
and MVV (P = 0.103). Diary dry rates (the proportion of patients reporting no UUI
episodes at endpoint among those with one or more UUI episodes at baseline) were
significantly higher with fesoterodine (64%) than with tolterodine ER (57%; P =
0.015) and placebo (45%; P < 0.001). Improvements in PPBC, UPS and OAB-q scale
and domain scores at week 12 were all significantly better with fesoterodine than
placebo (all P < 0.001) and tolterodine ER (all P < 0.05) except for the OAB-q
Sleep domain vs tolterodine ER (P = 0.081). Dry mouth and constipation rates were
28% and 5% in the fesoterodine group, 16% and 4% in the tolterodine ER group, and
6% and 3% with placebo, respectively. Discontinuations due to treatment-emergent
adverse events were 6%, 4% and 2% in the fesoterodine, tolterodine ER, and
placebo groups, respectively.
CONCLUSION: In patients with OAB, fesoterodine 8 mg showed superior efficacy over
tolterodine ER 4 mg and placebo in reducing UUI episodes (primary endpoint) and
in improving most patient-reported outcome measures. Both active treatments were
well tolerated.
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