Table 2.
Author | Study design | Cohort | Intervention | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|
A, NKB in healthy males | ||||
Jayasena et al (2014) (128) | Randomized single-blinded placebo-controlled trial | 23 healthy men | NKB (IV infusion 0.4-5.12 nmol/kg/h over 90 min, 5.12 nmol/kg/h over 4 h) | NKB did not alter LH, FSH, or testosterone levels at all doses |
Narayanaswamy et al (2016) (129) | Randomized single-blinded placebo-controlled trial | 5 healthy men per group | Naltrexone (oral 50 mg) NKB (IV infusion 2.56 nmol/kg/h over 8 h) KP54 (IV infusion 0.1 nmol/kg/h over 8 h) |
Whereas naltrexone and KP54 increased LH levels, NKB did not alter LH or FSH |
B, NKB in healthy females | ||||
Jayasena et al (2014) (128) | Randomized single-blinded placebo-controlled trial | 5-8 premenopausal women per group | NKB (IV infusion 0.32, 0.64, 1.28, 2.56, or 5.12 nmol/kg/h for 3 h) vs vehicle | No change in LH, FSH, and E2 at all doses throughout menstrual cycle |
Jayasena et al (2015) (130) | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, 2-way crossover trial | 10 premenopausal women | NKB (IV infusion 5.12 nmol/kg/h over 30 min) vs vehicle during follicular phase | NKB induced hot flashes in 8/10 women, and elevated heart rate, skin temperature, and thermal imaging |
C, NK3R antagonism in PCOS | ||||
George et al (2016) (131) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial | 65 PCOS | AZD4901 (oral 20 mg, 40 mg, 80 mg, once daily for 28 d) | Highest dose of AZD4901 reduced:
|
Skorupskaite et al (2020) (98) | Prospective study | 15 PCOS | MLE4901 (oral 40 mg 2×/d for 7 d) vs vehicle | MLE4901 vs vehicle reduced:
|
Fraser et al (2021) (132) | Phase 2a, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | 73 PCOS | Fezolinetant (oral 60 mg, 180 mg, 4×/d) | Highest dose of Fezolinetant reduced testosterone by 33%, LH by −10.17 IU/L and FSH by −1.46 IU/L |
D, NK3R antagonism in menopausal hot flashes | ||||
Prague et al (2017) (133) | Phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 28 menopausal women | MLE4901(oral 40 mg 2×/d for 4 wk) vs vehicle | MLE4901 reduced hot flash frequency vs vehicle (19.35 vs 49.01 per wk) and decreased hot flash severity vs vehicle (3.27 vs 5.70 per wk) |
Depypere et al (2019) (134) | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 87 menopausal women | Fezolinetant (oral 90 mg 2×/d for 12 wk) vs vehicle | Fezolinetant reduced VMS score vs vehicle (−26.5 vs −12.2) and decreased frequency of moderate/severe VMS by 5 episodes per d |
Fraser et al (2020) (135) | Phase 2b, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 287 menopausal women | Fezolinetant (oral 15, 30, 60, 90 mg 2×/d or 30, 60, 120 mg 1×/d for 12 wk) vs vehicle | All doses of fezolinetant, except lowest one, reduced moderate/severe VMS (>2×/d) by 4 and 12 wk |
Trower et al (2020) (136) | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 76 menopausal women | NT-814 (oral 50, 100, 150, 300 mg 1×/d for 14 d) vs vehicle | NT-814 reduced hot flash frequency by 24% (50 mg), 59% (100 mg), 84% (150 mg), and 66% (300 mg) |
Lederman et al (2023) (137) | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 522 menopausal women | Fezolinetant (oral 30 mg or 45 mg 1×/d for 12 wk) vs vehicle followed by 40-wk active treatment extension | Fezolinetant reduced VMS frequency at wk 4 (difference in change in least squares mean –1.87; 30 mg, –2.07; 45 mg) and wk 12 (–2.39; 30 mg, –2.55; 45 mg) Fezolinetant 30 mg or 45 mg 1×/d, reduced severity of VMS at wk 4 (−0.15 to −0.19) and wk 12 (−0.24 to −0.2) |
Abbreviations: AUC, area under the curve; E2, estradiol; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; IV, intravenous; KP, kisspeptin; LH, luteinizing hormone; NK3R, neurokinin 3 receptor; NKB, neurokinin B; PCOS, polycystic ovary syndrome; VMS, vasomotor symptoms.