Subgroup analyses from the RECONNECT phase 3 bremelanotide trials, examining how age, weight, BMI, and testosterone levels modify treatment response. Bremelanotide's efficacy was consistent across subgroups, with no significant interactions. Supports the generalizability of bremelanotide's HSDD benefit across diverse premenopausal women regardless of body composition or hormone levels.
Abstract
Hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), the most prevalent female sexual dysfunction, is characterized as persistent diminished desire for sexual activity accompanied by distress. The efficacy and safety of bremelanotide, a melanocortin receptor agonist approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for treatment of acquired generalized HSDD in premenopausal women, were established in the phase 3 RECONNECT studies, two identically designed double-blind randomized placebo-controlled studies with an optional 52-week open-label extension. This report investigates efficacy of bremelanotide versus placebo according to prespecified subgroups (age, weight, body mass index [BMI], and bioavailable testosterone) in the RECONNECT studies.Patients self-administered bremelanotide 1.75 mg or placebo subcutaneously using an autoinjector, as needed, before sexual activity for 24 weeks. Efficacy was assessed using change from baseline to end-of-study for Female Sexual Function Index desire domain and Female Sexual Distress Scale-Desire/Arousal/Orgasm Item 13 for bremelanotide versus placebo.Among 1202 patients included in the integrated and subgroup analyses, bremelanotide achieved statistically significant improvements in measures of increased desire and decreased distress associated with low desire across all age, weight, and BMI subgroups, and all baseline bioavailable testosterone quartiles, with few exceptions. Bremelanotide was further associated with statistically significant increases in reported sexual desire ( < 0.05) in patients not taking hormonal contraceptives, and with a numerical advantage in those taking hormonal contraceptives. Patients treated with bremelanotide experienced decreased distress compared with those in the placebo group at levels of statistical significance ( < 0.05) regardless of hormonal contraceptive use. Statistically significant improvements were observed in the presence or absence of decreased arousal, and regardless of HSDD duration.Bremelanotide was associated with statistically significant improvements in sexual desire and reduced distress across several prespecified subgroups, with few exceptions.
Authors
Simon, James A; Kingsberg, Sheryl A; Portman, David; Jordan, Robert; Lucas, Johna; Sadiq, Amama; Krop, Julie; Clayton, Anita H
Keywords
bremelanotidefemalehypoactive sexual desire disorderpremenopausal