In this study, levocetirizine 5 mg QD was well tolerated but failed to show significant efficacy compared with placebo in a US adult population with SAR. This finding is inconsistent with all previous studies with levocetirizine and in contrast to a concurrently run, similarly designed US study. It reflects the importance of conducting duplicate studies as there is always a small but real risk of false negative results in clinical studies, irrespective of the methodologic quality.
Allergic rhinitis (AR) and chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU) are common causes of substantial illness and disability in preschool children. Antihistamines are commonly used to treat preschool children with these conditions, but their use is based mostly on extrapolated efficacy from adult populations; it is thus important to characterize the safety of antihistamines in the pediatric population. This study was designed to assess the safety of levocetirizine dihydrochloride oral liquid drops in infants and children with AR or CIU. Two multicenter, double-blind, randomized, parallel-group studies randomized infants aged 6-11 months (study 1, n = 69) and children aged 1-5 years (study 2, n = 173) to levocetirizine, 1.25 mg (q.d. or b.i.d., respectively), or placebo for 2 weeks, using a 2:1 ratio. Safety evaluations included treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), vital signs, electrocardiographic (ECG) assessments, and laboratory tests. The overall incidence of TEAEs was similar between levocetirizine and placebo in both studies. Most TEAEs were mild or moderate in intensity. TEAEs prompted discontinuation of therapy in three patients receiving levocetirizine in study 1. No clinically relevant changes from baseline in vital signs or laboratory parameters were apparent in either study; changes from baseline in these evaluations were similar between groups. No significant changes were observed in ECG parameters, including corrected QT interval. Levocetirizine, 1.25 and 2.5 mg/day, was well tolerated in infants aged 6-11 months and in children aged 1-5 years, respectively, with AR or CIU.
The incidence and propagation of infrageniculate DVT in an aggressively prophylaxed trauma population are greater than previously reported. The clinical significance of isolated infrageniculate DVT remains to be determined, but when associated with a multiple injury trauma, the patient may be at risk for future suprageniculate DVT formation and may benefit from therapeutic anticoagulation.
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