US20030105128A1 - Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups - Google Patents
Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US20030105128A1 US20030105128A1 US10/208,410 US20841002A US2003105128A1 US 20030105128 A1 US20030105128 A1 US 20030105128A1 US 20841002 A US20841002 A US 20841002A US 2003105128 A1 US2003105128 A1 US 2003105128A1
- Authority
- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- subject
- flosequinan
- quinoline
- erection
- impotence
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Abandoned
Links
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- 239000006217 urethral suppository Substances 0.000 description 1
- 210000001215 vagina Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 208000000331 vasculogenic impotence Diseases 0.000 description 1
- 229940124549 vasodilator Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 239000003071 vasodilator agent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 210000003462 vein Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- XLYOFNOQVPJJNP-UHFFFAOYSA-N water Substances O XLYOFNOQVPJJNP-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/21—Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/33—Heterocyclic compounds
- A61K31/335—Heterocyclic compounds having oxygen as the only ring hetero atom, e.g. fungichromin
- A61K31/34—Heterocyclic compounds having oxygen as the only ring hetero atom, e.g. fungichromin having five-membered rings with one oxygen as the only ring hetero atom, e.g. isosorbide
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/33—Heterocyclic compounds
- A61K31/395—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
- A61K31/435—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with one nitrogen as the only ring hetero atom
- A61K31/47—Quinolines; Isoquinolines
Definitions
- the present invention provides relates to methods for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in males and females (including but not limited to erectile dysfunction in males) in particular treatment groups.
- the methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions to patients who are free of symptoms of cardiac disease and who have not been treated with drugs which cause hypotensive effects, such as nitrites and nitrates.
- Impotence or erectile insufficiency is a widespread disorder that is thought to affect about twelve percent of adult men under age forty-five, about twenty percent of men at age sixty, and about fifty-five percent of men at age seventy-five.
- erectile dysfunction can be psychological, resulting from anxiety or depression, with no apparent somatic or organic impairment.
- erectile dysfunction which is referred to as “psychogenic” is responsible for about fifteen to twenty percent of cases of impotence.
- the erectile dysfunction is associated with atherosclerosis of the arteries supplying blood to the penis; such dysfunction is referred to as “arteriogenic” or “atherosclerotic.” About forty to sixty percent of cases of impotence are arteriogenic in origin.
- Erectile insufficiency there is also a high incidence of erectile insufficiency among diabetics, particularly those with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Erectile dysfunction in diabetics is often classified as “diabetogenic,” although the underlying dysfunction is usually neurogenic associated with neuropathy, but may be arteriogenic or neurogenic and arteriogenic. About half of diabetic males suffer from erectile insufficiency, and about half of the cases of neurogenic impotence are in diabetics.
- erectile insufficiency is sometimes a side effect of certain drugs, such as beta-blockers that are administered to reduce blood pressure in persons suffering from hypertension, or drugs administered to treat depression or anxiety. Excessive alcohol consumption has also been linked to erectile insufficiency. These forms of erectile insufficiency may be regarded as a subset of neurogenic or psychogenic insufficiency.
- a number of methods to treat impotence are available. These treatments include pharmacological treatments, surgery and, in cases of psychogenic dysfunction, psychological counseling is sometimes effective.
- Psychogenic impotence often can be cured by counseling coupled with a demonstration to the patient that he is capable of having a full erection by inducing such an erection one of a few times in the patients. Insufficiency due to excessive alcohol consumption is sometimes cured by reducing or elimination such consumption.
- Papaverine is now widely used to treat impotence, although papaverine is ineffective in overcoming impotence due, at least in part, to severe atherosclerosis. Papaverine is effective in cases where the dysfunction is psychogenic or neurogenic and severe atherosclerosis is not involved. Injection of papaverine, a smooth muscle relaxant, or phenoxybenzamine, a non-specific blocker and hypotensive, into a corpus cavernosum has been found to cause an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration.
- intracavernosal injection of phentolamine, an ⁇ -adrenergic blocker causes an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration.
- the resulting erection is one of significantly shorter duration than that induced by intracavernosal injection of papaverine or phenoxybenzamine and is of such short duration that satisfactory sexual relations are difficult or impossible.
- priapism Treatment of impotence with papaverine or phenoxybenzamine often results in priapism, a locking-up of an erection for a long period of time, typically a few hours and sometimes longer than twenty-four hours.
- Priapism is a serious, deleterious side effect of treatment of erectile insufficiency with these drugs. Beyond the embarrassment that may be caused for some men, priapism is usually painful, irreversibly damages erectile tissue, and, to be relieved, requires bleeding or pharmacological intervention, such as injection of a sympathomimetic drug, such as adrenaline.
- the present invention provides relates to methods for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in males and females (including but not limited to erectile dysfunction in males) in particular treatment groups.
- the methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions to patients who are free of symptoms of cardiac disease and who have not been treated with drugs which cause hypotensive effects, such as nitrites and nitrates.
- the compositions comprise quinolines and quinolones, including derivatives thereof.
- the present invention contemplates halogenated quinolines (e.g., bromoquinoline) and isoquinolines (e.g., 1-methylisoquinoline and 5-nitroisoquinoline).
- the present invention contemplates halogenated quinolones (e.g., flosequinolone).
- the quinolone is a thioquinolone or a sulphinyl or suphonyl derivatives thereof.
- the halogenated quinolone is flosequinan (7-fluoro-1-methyl-3-methylsulphinyl-4-quinolone).
- the method comprises a) providing: i) a patient (whether male or female) suffering from symptoms of sexual dysfunction who is free from cardiac disease; and ii) flosequinan; and b) introducing said flosequinan to said patient such that such symptoms arc reduced.
- the method comprises a) providing: i) a patient (whether male or female) suffering from symptoms of sexual dysfunction who is not being treated (and/or has not been treated in the past) with a drug that causes hypotensive effects, and ii) flosequinan; and b) introducing said flosequinan to said patient such that such symptoms are reduced.
- the method comprises a) providing: i) a patient (whether male or female) suffering from symptoms of sexual dysfunction who is not being treated (and/or has not been treated in the past) with a nitrite or nitrate, and ii) flosequinan; and b) introducing said flosequinan to said patient such that such symptoms are reduced.
- the method comprises providing: i) a male with erectile dysfunction, and ii) flosequinan; and introducing said flosequinan to said male such that an erection is produced.
- the flosequinan is introduced into said male orally.
- the male is an adult human and the oral dosage is in a single dose per day of fifty to seventy-five milligrams.
- said flosequinan is introduced cutaneously, transurethrally, by standard injection and intracavernosally.
- the present invention is not limited by the degree of response by the male subject.
- the erection induced is sufficient for vaginal penetration.
- the present invention also contemplates the use of sexual stimulation in addition to the application of a pharmaceutical composition.
- one embodiment comprises a) providing: i) a male, having a penis, with erectile dysfunction, and ii) flosequinan, iii) sexual stimulation; and b) introducing said flosequinan and sexual stimulation to said male such that an erection is produced.
- the present invention is not limited by the nature of the sexual stimulation.
- the sexual stimulation is sexually explicit media.
- the sexual stimulation involves manipulation of the penis, such as with vibration.
- the present invention contemplates a formulation comprising a quinoline or derivative thereof in a mixture comprising lactose.
- quinoline refers to chemical compositions comprising quinoline as set forth in the following structure:
- derivatives of quinoline refers to chemical compositions comprising quinoline with a chemical group attached, including halogenated quinoline, e.g., 5-bromoquinoline:
- methylsulphinyl derivatives of quinoline refers to chemical compositions comprising quinoline with a methylsulphinyl group attached. Examples include flosequinan (7-fluoro-1-methyl-3-methylsulphinyl-4-quinolone):
- a patient who is “free from cardiac disease” and a patient who is “free from symptoms of cardiac disease” indicate that the patient has not been diagnosed with angina, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure and that symptoms of angina, ischemia, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure have not been detected, respectively.
- drugs that have hypotensive effects are those drugs which, when administered, cause the patient's end-diastolic blood pressure to be reduced.
- Nitrates are commonly used drugs which have hypotensive effects.
- Nitrates are compounds that contain the —NO 2 — moiety. Nitrates typically used in the clinic are shown in the attached table.
- erectile dysfunction refers to certain disorders of the cavernous tissue of the penis and the associated facia which produce impotence, the inability to attain a sexually functional erection;
- standard injection refers to the placement of a pharmaceutical composition into a subject (e.g., with a hypodermic needle).
- a pharmaceutical composition e.g., a pharmaceutical composition into a subject (e.g., with a hypodermic needle).
- such injection can be made subcutaneously, intravenously, intramuscularly, intracavernosally, etc.
- intracavernosal injection is injection into the corpus cavernosum of the penis.
- an “erection” refers to the condition of a penis whereby it is at least semi-rigid as opposed to being in a flaccid state.
- oral administration refers to the introduction of a pharmaceutical composition into a subject by way of the oral cavity (e.g., in aqueous liquid or solid form).
- cutaneously refers to the introduction of a pharmaceutical composition into a subject by application to the surface of the skin such that the composition is absorbed into the subject.
- transurethrally refers to the introduction of a pharmaceutical composition to the urethra of a subject such that the composition is absorbed into the subject.
- sufficient for vaginal penetration refers to the state of an erection such that the penis is capable of entering a vagina without manual manipulation.
- sexual stimulation refers to activity that would induce an erection in a male without erectile dysfunction (e.g., sexually explicit media, manual manipulation, vibration, live erotic entertainment, etc.)
- sexually explicit media refers to films, videos, books, magazines, etc. that depict sexual activity.
- single dosage refers to a pharmaceutical composition of a formulation that is capable of achieving its intended effect in a single application.
- the present invention provides relates to methods for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in males and females (including but not limited to erectile dysfunction in males) in particular treatment groups.
- the methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions to patients who are free of symptoms of cardiac disease and who have not been treated with drugs which cause hypotensive effects, such as nitrites and nitrates.
- the compositions comprise quinolines and quinolones, including derivatives thereof.
- flosequinan is administered.
- flosequinan may potentiate the hypotensive effects of nitrates, and its administration to patients who are concurrently using organic nitrates in any form may be contraindicated.
- the present invention contemplates the use of compositions that are effective to induce an erection in a human male suffering from impotence of any origin, other than anatomical deficiencies (i.e., lacking a penis or a significant portion thereof) that preclude an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration.
- these compositions may be used to induce an erection in a male suffering from impotence caused by severe atherosclerosis, and also impotence that is neurogenic or psychogenic in origin.
- the compositions utilized in the methods of the present invention comprise quinolines and quinolones, including derivatives thereof.
- the present invention is not limited by the nature of the derivatives, in one embodiment, the present invention encompasses the use of a variety of quinoline derivatives (e.g., 5-bromoquinoline, 5-nitroisoquinoline, 8-nitroisoquinoline and 1-methylisoquinoline).
- quinoline derivatives e.g., 5-bromoquinoline, 5-nitroisoquinoline, 8-nitroisoquinoline and 1-methylisoquinoline.
- One skilled in the art can readily produce such derivatives as set forth in McMurry, Organic Chemistry, 2 nd Ed., Brooks/Cole Publishing, Belmont, Calif. (1988), pages 1044-1045 and 1076.
- the present invention contemplates the use of methylthio and methylsulphinyl derivatives of quinoline.
- the methylsulphinyl derivative is flosequinan (7-fluoro-1-methyl-3-methylsulphinyl-4-quinolone).
- flosequinan has been reported to be a selective inhibitor of phosphodiesterase III [Gristwood et al., Br. J. Pharmacol. 105:985 (1992)]. [Frodsham et al., Eur. J. Pharmacol. 211:383 (1992)], however, report that the phosphodiesterase inhibition of flosequinan, as relevant to its efficacy in heart failure, is questionable. Thus, the application of flosequinan to particular purposes in the body is not well-characterized and must be determined empirically.
- a human male suffering from impotence that is substantially only neurogenic or psychogenic is readily made by a person skilled in the art using a number of readily available diagnostic procedures.
- a male suffering from impotence can first be given a physical examination with particular attention to possible penile and scrotal pathology, whereby any anatomical deficiency precluding an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration can be detected.
- the male can be subjected to tests, whereby penile venous leakage or severe or untreatable atherosclerosis can be detected.
- Such tests include determination of the penobrachial blood pressure index (PBPI), doppler investigation of the penile arteries, and a papaverine test.
- PBPI penobrachial blood pressure index
- the PBPI is the penile systolic blood pressure divided by the systolic blood pressure determined at one of the arms. These blood pressures can be determined by any number of standard techniques.
- the penile systolic blood pressure can be determined by i) placing an inflatable cuff around the base of the free part of the penis in the flaccid state which is capable of being used to apply variable pressure, readable from a gauge, to an object around which the cuff is placed, ii) localizing the penile arteries with a Doppler ultrasound probe (e.g., 8 MHz probe, such as the Mini Doplex D500 available from Huntleigh Technology, Luton, United Kingdom), and then iii) inflating and deflating the cuff and ascertaining the pressure at which the Doppler sound reappears.
- a Doppler ultrasound probe e.g., 8 MHz probe, such as the Mini Doplex D500 available from Huntleigh Technology, Luton, United Kingdom
- the pressure at which the Doppler sound reappears is the penile systolic blood pressure.
- a male's penile blood pressure is regarded as normal if his PBPI is >0.80.
- each of the two penile cavernous arteries is investigated distal to the aforementioned cuff using the Doppler ultrasound problem.
- the function of each of the two arteries is assessed by Doppler ultrasound using an arbitrary scale of 0, 1, 2 or 3, where 0 means that the function is so deficient that the artery cannot be located and 3 means that the artery is well enough that maximal Doppler sound is observed.
- a tourniquet is placed at the base of the free part of the penis and tightened and then, with the patient seated, 30 mg of papaverine in 1 ml of a physiologically acceptable fluid (e.g., physiological saline or phosphate-buffered saline) is injected into the penile cavernous body.
- a physiologically acceptable fluid e.g., physiological saline or phosphate-buffered saline
- Erectile response is classified as full rigidity, if the angle between the penis and the legs in the standing position is >90°, and tumescence or no response if the angle is less than or equal to 45°.
- An impotent male who does not have an anatomical deficiency that would preclude having an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration, who has a PBPI >0.80, who has scores of 2 or 3 in Doppler ultrasound investigations of both of the cavernous arteries of the penis, after papaverine injection as described above, and who has a fully rigid erection after papaverine injection and vibration as described above, is suffering from impotence that is “substantially only neurogenic or psychogenic” in origin.
- Atherosclerosis or venous leakage contributes to such impotence, and atherosclerosis likely does contribute if the score is less than 3 in the Doppler investigation of one or both of the cavernous arteries after papaverine injection; but any venous leakage or atherosclerosis in such impotence is not untreatable and, consequently, is not a substantial factor in the impotence and such atherosclerosis, if any, is less than severe.
- Impotence which is a side-effect of drugs such as beta-blockers, is deemed to be neurogenic impotence in the present specification.
- impotence which is a result of alcoholism or excessive consumption of alcohol, is deemed to be neurogenic or psychogenic impotence, for purposes of the present specification.
- a male who is diagnosed in accordance with the present specification as suffering from impotence that is “substantially only neurogenic or psychogenic” in origin is suffering from impotence that is substantially only neurogenic, psychogenic or neurogenic and psychogenic in origin, even though an underlying cause of the impotence has been identified as a side-effect of a drug, alcoholism or excessive consumption of alcohol.
- Cavernosometry can be done using, both before and after intracavernosal injection of 60 mg of papaverine (in 1 ml of physiological saline), infusion of physiological saline through a 19-gauge needle into one corpus cavernosum with a 21-gauge needle inserted into the other corpus cavernosum for measurement of intracorporal pressure (which is recorded on a plotter).
- the infusion rates needed to induce and maintain an erection are measured. If the infusion rate needed to maintain an erection is greater than 50 ml/min before administration of the papaverine and greater than 15 ml/min after administration of the papaverine, untreatable venous leakage is present. As long as an erection can be achieved at some flow rate less than about 100 m/min before injection of the papaverine and less than about 50 ml/min after the injection of papaverine, it might be possible, using cavernosography, to locate the venous lesion associated with the leakage, and thereby confirm the diagnosis based on cavernosometry and provide information for possible surgical correction for the leakage.
- the penis is X-rayed, both before and after intracavernosal injection of 60 mg papaverine (in 1 ml of physiological saline), while infusing contrast medium into the corpus cavernosum (e.g., through a 19-gauge needle) at a flow rate that maintains an erection during the x-raying.
- contrast media suitable for the procedure are available in the art; these are typically aqueous solutions of iodinated compounds that provide between about 180 mg/ml and about 360 mg/ml of iodine.
- Examples are a solution of iohexol providing 240 mg/ml of iodine sold by Winthrop Pharmaceuticals, New York, N.Y., USA, and a solution of iopamidol providing 300 mg/ml iodine sold by Astra Meditec, Goteborg, Sweden.
- 50-100 ml of the contrast medium will be employed for each x-ray (i.e., before and then after the injection of papaverine).
- 30 mg papaverine in 1 ml physiological saline
- stimulation by vibration can be employed in place of 60 mg papaverine (in 1 ml physiological saline).
- the present invention be limited by the particular nature of the therapeutic preparation.
- the quinolines or quinolone derivatives e.g., flosequinan
- physiologically tolerable liquid, gel or solid carriers diluents, adjuvants and excipients.
- quinoline or quinolone analogs may be used together with other chemotherapeutic agents.
- formulations may also contain such normally employed additives as binders, fillers, carriers, preservatives, stabilizing agents, emulsifiers, buffers and excipients as, for example, pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharin, cellulose, magnesium carbonate, and the like.
- binders such normally employed additives as binders, fillers, carriers, preservatives, stabilizing agents, emulsifiers, buffers and excipients as, for example, pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharin, cellulose, magnesium carbonate, and the like.
- binders such normally employed additives as binders, fillers, carriers, preservatives, stabilizing agents, emulsifiers, buffers and excipients as, for example, pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharin, cellulose, magnesium
- the present invention is not limited by the method of introduction of the therapeutic compound to the body.
- the present invention contemplates administering cutaneously, orally, intracavernosally, transurethrally or by standard injection.
- Oral administration of flosequinan is effective, with a mean absolute bioavailability of 72% following a single does of fifty milligrams. Peak plasma concentrations of flosequinan are observed 1-2 hours following oral administration, while peak metabolite plasma levels are observed about seven hours following oral dosage. While the present invention is not limited to a specific dosage level, for adult humans, in one embodiment the dosage is a single dosage per day of 50 milligrams, while in another embodiment the dosage is a single dosage per day of 75 milligrams.
- Flosequinan is water soluble and is soluble in many organic solvents.
- aqueous and organic solution of flosequinan for oral administration is contemplated.
- flosequinan can be associated with a solid pharmaceutical carrier for solid oral administration (i.e., in pill form).
- the inactive ingredients include croscarmellose sodium, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, lactose, magnesium stearate, methocel E5, microcrystalline cellulose, povidine, propylene glycol and titanium dioxide.
- Flosequinan may also be administered cutaneously in a carrier adapted for topical administration.
- carriers include creams, ointments, lotions, pastes, jellies, sprays, aerosols, bath oils, or other pharmaceutical carriers which accomplish direct contact between flosequinan and the pore of the skin.
- pharmaceutical preparations may comprise from about 0.001% to about 10%, and preferably from about 0.01 to 5% by w/w of the active compound (e.g., flosequinan) in a suitable carrier.
- the active compound e.g., flosequinan
- the present invention can be incorporated in other products associated with sexual activity.
- a coated, erection inducing condom as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,829,991, hereby incorporated by reference, and can be utilized with flosequinan or flosequinan in a pharmaceutical carrier as described above.
- injection of flosequinan can be carried out by any conventional injection means (e.g., employing an hypodermic syringe and needle or a similar device such as the NovolinPen. sold by Squibb-Novo, Inc., Princeton, N.J., USA).
- This injection may be by subject injecting himself or by another person (such as a partner during sexual relations or a physician prior to sexual relations) injecting the male whose erection is to be induced.
- Methods for intracavernosal injection are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,912 to Gerstenberg et al., hereby incorporated by reference.
- Flosequinan can be introduced intracavernosally in a physiologically acceptable composition.
- a physiologically acceptable composition are aqueous solutions that are physiologically acceptable for administration by intracavernosal injection into the penis.
- the physiologically acceptable carrier is selected such that it is not painful or irritating upon intracavernosal injection.
- the physiologically acceptable compositions will preferably be sterile at the time of administration by intracavernosal injection.
- physiologically acceptable compositions for use in the methods is physiological saline or phosphate buffered saline, in which flosequinan is dissolved or suspended, such that the resulting composition is suitable for intracavernosal injection.
- a physiologically acceptable composition can also include a non-irritant preservative, such as, e.g., benzalkonium chloride at 0.05% (w/v) to 0./2% (w/v).
- non-toxic salts of VIP, PHM and ⁇ -adrenergic blockers that can be employed in a physiologically acceptable composition for use in the methods herein, including, among others, the chloride, bromide, acetate, sulfate, and mesylate salts.
- the penis is constricted near the base thereof and between the base and the point at which the injection into a corpus cavernosum occurs, in order to limit loss of injected fluid from the corpus cavernosum before the ingredients in the fluid, that are active in inducing erection, have been able to have erection-inducing effects.
- the constriction can be effected by any means known in the art, such as with a tourniquet, cuff, rubber band or the like, or even manually, in order to slow the release of the injected fluid and the pharmacologically active substance(s) therein into the general circulation.
- the present invention is not limited by a particular method for introducing flosequinan transurethrally.
- flosequinan is introduced to the urethra in a carrier as described for cutaneous administration.
- Devices and methods for transurethral introduction of pharmaceutical compositions is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,474,535 to Place et al.; Voss, U.S. Pat. No. 4,801,587 and Kock, EPA 0357581, all hereby incorporated by reference.
- Additional methods of introducing flosequinan transurethrally include the use of medicated catheters, such as those used to prevent or treat localized infections and irritation of the urethra and bladder (See U.S. Pat. No. 4,640,912, hereby incorporated by reference).
- transurethral administration of pharmaceutical compositions is presented in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,478,822, 4,610,868, 4,640,912 and 4,746,508, all hereby incorporated by reference, and medicated urethral suppositories, inserts or plugs, typically containing anti-infective agents or spermicide are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 1,897,423, 2,584,166, 2,696,209 and 3,373,746, all incorporated by reference.
- the present invention is not limited to the method of injecting flosequinan, in the preferred embodiment, it is injected with a standard syringe.
- One skilled in the art would be capable of injecting flosequinan with a carrier as described for intracavernosal injection.
- the administration of the compositions of the present invention is accompanied by sexual stimulation to induce an erection.
- the sexual stimulation can begin before or after the introduction of flosequinan. If the stimulation begins after the injection, it is preferably begun within 5 to 10 minutes to insure that there is significant overlap of the pharmacological effects of the pharmaceutical composition administered and the stimulative effects of the sexual stimulation. Whether the stimulation begins before or after the injection, it will continue preferably at least until an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration is achieved.
- Sexual stimulation as prescribed by these methods includes any form of sexual stimulation that would induce an erection in a normal male who is not suffering from erectile insufficiency.
- the sexual stimulation can be that which occurs in the course of sexual relations between the subject and another person or can be outside sexual relations with another person.
- Examples of methods of sexual stimulation include, alone or in combination, touching or erotically manipulating erogenous areas of the genital organs or other erogenous parts of the body; providing visual stimulation, as with a sexually explicit media (e.g., pornographic film) or other form of sexually stimulative show or display.
- providing vibratory stimulation to the penis at between about 30 Hz and about 100 Hz with an amplitude of about 1 mm to about 5 ram, as can be provided, for example, by resting the penis on the table of a vibrating apparatus such as that of a Vibrector system (Multicept, Genofte, Denmark).
- a preferred method of sexual stimulation includes providing visual stimulation, as with a pornographic film, simultaneously with vibratory stimulation of the penis, as with a Vibrector system set to between about 30 Hz and about 60 Hz (usually about 50 Hz) in frequency and between about 1 mm and about 2.5 mm (usually about 2.2 mm) in amplitude.
- the present invention provides methods of treatment of male erectile dysfunction with pharmaceutical agents.
- quinolines and quinolones are administered therapeutically to patients having such dysfunction.
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Abstract
Methods for treating specific patient groups for sexual dysfunction are provided. The methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions in patients who are free of cardiac disease and/or who have not been given organic nitrates.
Description
- The present invention provides relates to methods for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in males and females (including but not limited to erectile dysfunction in males) in particular treatment groups. The methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions to patients who are free of symptoms of cardiac disease and who have not been treated with drugs which cause hypotensive effects, such as nitrites and nitrates.
- Impotence or erectile insufficiency is a widespread disorder that is thought to affect about twelve percent of adult men under age forty-five, about twenty percent of men at age sixty, and about fifty-five percent of men at age seventy-five.
- There is more than one cause of erectile dysfunction. For example, erectile dysfunction can be psychological, resulting from anxiety or depression, with no apparent somatic or organic impairment. Such erectile dysfunction, which is referred to as “psychogenic”, is responsible for about fifteen to twenty percent of cases of impotence. In other cases, the erectile dysfunction is associated with atherosclerosis of the arteries supplying blood to the penis; such dysfunction is referred to as “arteriogenic” or “atherosclerotic.” About forty to sixty percent of cases of impotence are arteriogenic in origin.
- In still other cases, there is leakage from veins in the penis such that sufficient pressure for an erection can be neither obtained nor maintained. This dysfunction is referred to as “venous leakage,” or “abnormal drainage”. This condition is often exacerbated by the presence of some arteriogenic dysfunction whereby the supply of blood to the penis is impaired. In still other cases, the dysfunction is associated with a neuropathy, such as nerve damage arising from, for example, surgery or a pelvic injury, in the nervous system affecting the penis. Such a dysfunction is referred to as “neurogenic” and this accounts for about ten to fifteen percent of cases of impotence.
- There is also a high incidence of erectile insufficiency among diabetics, particularly those with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Erectile dysfunction in diabetics is often classified as “diabetogenic,” although the underlying dysfunction is usually neurogenic associated with neuropathy, but may be arteriogenic or neurogenic and arteriogenic. About half of diabetic males suffer from erectile insufficiency, and about half of the cases of neurogenic impotence are in diabetics.
- Additionally, erectile insufficiency is sometimes a side effect of certain drugs, such as beta-blockers that are administered to reduce blood pressure in persons suffering from hypertension, or drugs administered to treat depression or anxiety. Excessive alcohol consumption has also been linked to erectile insufficiency. These forms of erectile insufficiency may be regarded as a subset of neurogenic or psychogenic insufficiency.
- A number of methods to treat impotence are available. These treatments include pharmacological treatments, surgery and, in cases of psychogenic dysfunction, psychological counseling is sometimes effective. Psychogenic impotence often can be cured by counseling coupled with a demonstration to the patient that he is capable of having a full erection by inducing such an erection one of a few times in the patients. Insufficiency due to excessive alcohol consumption is sometimes cured by reducing or elimination such consumption.
- In the rare cases, where the insufficiency is physical because of venous leakage, surgery can usually be employed to repair the venous lesion and thereby either cure the insufficiency or, if there remains an erectile insufficiency after repair of the venous lesion, render the insufficiency amenable to treatment by pharmacological methods. Also, penile implants, which provide a mechanical means to produce an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration, are widely used to treat impotence. In recent years, implants have been employed, especially in cases where pharmacological intervention is ineffective, which are usually cases of severe atherogenic impotence. Treatment of impotence with penile implants, however, entails serious disadvantages. Such treatment requires surgery and necessitates total destruction of the erectile tissues of the penis, forever precluding normal erection.
- Pharmacological methods of treatment are also available. Such methods, however, have not proven to be highly satisfactory and can be accompanied by severe side-effects. Papaverine is now widely used to treat impotence, although papaverine is ineffective in overcoming impotence due, at least in part, to severe atherosclerosis. Papaverine is effective in cases where the dysfunction is psychogenic or neurogenic and severe atherosclerosis is not involved. Injection of papaverine, a smooth muscle relaxant, or phenoxybenzamine, a non-specific blocker and hypotensive, into a corpus cavernosum has been found to cause an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration. Also, in cases where severe atherosclerosis is not a cause of the dysfunction, intracavernosal injection of phentolamine, an α-adrenergic blocker, causes an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration. The resulting erection is one of significantly shorter duration than that induced by intracavernosal injection of papaverine or phenoxybenzamine and is of such short duration that satisfactory sexual relations are difficult or impossible.
- Treatment of impotence with papaverine or phenoxybenzamine often results in priapism, a locking-up of an erection for a long period of time, typically a few hours and sometimes longer than twenty-four hours. Priapism is a serious, deleterious side effect of treatment of erectile insufficiency with these drugs. Beyond the embarrassment that may be caused for some men, priapism is usually painful, irreversibly damages erectile tissue, and, to be relieved, requires bleeding or pharmacological intervention, such as injection of a sympathomimetic drug, such as adrenaline.
- Even if priapism does not occur with use of papaverine, such use is associated with a painful, burning sensation in the first two or so minutes after the injection and there are indications that repeated use of papaverine causes undesirable, extensive intracavernous fibrosis. Further, as indicated above, impotence arising from severe atherosclerosis is not susceptible to treatment with papaverine, phenoxybenzamine, phentolamine or papaverine together with phentolamine. In any case, phenoxybenzamine is not suitable for use in treating impotence because it is a carcinogen.
- Thus, although impotence is a ubiquitous problem, there are few satisfactory methods available for treating this disorder. Because of the relatively invasive intervention involved and the high failure rate of penile prostheses, surgical approaches provide unattractive alternatives. A safe pharmacological approach to the treatment of impotence is still to be achieved.
- What is needed is a pharmaceutical that is effective but lacking in significant side effects.
- The present invention provides relates to methods for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in males and females (including but not limited to erectile dysfunction in males) in particular treatment groups. The methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions to patients who are free of symptoms of cardiac disease and who have not been treated with drugs which cause hypotensive effects, such as nitrites and nitrates. The compositions comprise quinolines and quinolones, including derivatives thereof.
- It is not intended that the present invention be limited by the nature of the derivative. In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates halogenated quinolines (e.g., bromoquinoline) and isoquinolines (e.g., 1-methylisoquinoline and 5-nitroisoquinoline). In another embodiment, the present invention contemplates halogenated quinolones (e.g., flosequinolone). In a preferred embodiment, the quinolone is a thioquinolone or a sulphinyl or suphonyl derivatives thereof. In one embodiment, the halogenated quinolone is flosequinan (7-fluoro-1-methyl-3-methylsulphinyl-4-quinolone).
- In one embodiment, the method comprises a) providing: i) a patient (whether male or female) suffering from symptoms of sexual dysfunction who is free from cardiac disease; and ii) flosequinan; and b) introducing said flosequinan to said patient such that such symptoms arc reduced.
- In another embodiment, the method comprises a) providing: i) a patient (whether male or female) suffering from symptoms of sexual dysfunction who is not being treated (and/or has not been treated in the past) with a drug that causes hypotensive effects, and ii) flosequinan; and b) introducing said flosequinan to said patient such that such symptoms are reduced.
- In another embodiment, the method comprises a) providing: i) a patient (whether male or female) suffering from symptoms of sexual dysfunction who is not being treated (and/or has not been treated in the past) with a nitrite or nitrate, and ii) flosequinan; and b) introducing said flosequinan to said patient such that such symptoms are reduced.
- In one embodiment, the method comprises providing: i) a male with erectile dysfunction, and ii) flosequinan; and introducing said flosequinan to said male such that an erection is produced.
- It is not intended that the present invention be limited by the method of introduction of flosequinan. In one embodiment, the flosequinan is introduced into said male orally. In a preferred embodiment, the male is an adult human and the oral dosage is in a single dose per day of fifty to seventy-five milligrams. In other embodiments said flosequinan is introduced cutaneously, transurethrally, by standard injection and intracavernosally.
- The present invention is not limited by the degree of response by the male subject. In one embodiment, the erection induced is sufficient for vaginal penetration.
- Likewise, the present invention also contemplates the use of sexual stimulation in addition to the application of a pharmaceutical composition. For example, one embodiment comprises a) providing: i) a male, having a penis, with erectile dysfunction, and ii) flosequinan, iii) sexual stimulation; and b) introducing said flosequinan and sexual stimulation to said male such that an erection is produced.
- Likewise, the present invention is not limited by the nature of the sexual stimulation. In one embodiment, the sexual stimulation is sexually explicit media. In another embodiment, the sexual stimulation involves manipulation of the penis, such as with vibration.
- It is not intended that the present invention be limited by the nature of the formulation. In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates a formulation comprising a quinoline or derivative thereof in a mixture comprising lactose.
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- As used herein, a patient who is “free from cardiac disease” and a patient who is “free from symptoms of cardiac disease” indicate that the patient has not been diagnosed with angina, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure and that symptoms of angina, ischemia, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure have not been detected, respectively.
- As used herein, “drugs that have hypotensive effects” are those drugs which, when administered, cause the patient's end-diastolic blood pressure to be reduced. Nitrates are commonly used drugs which have hypotensive effects.
- As used herein, “nitrates” are compounds that contain the —NO 2— moiety. Nitrates typically used in the clinic are shown in the attached table.
- As used herein, the term “erectile dysfunction” refers to certain disorders of the cavernous tissue of the penis and the associated facia which produce impotence, the inability to attain a sexually functional erection;
- As used herein “standard injection” refers to the placement of a pharmaceutical composition into a subject (e.g., with a hypodermic needle). For example, such injection can be made subcutaneously, intravenously, intramuscularly, intracavernosally, etc.
TABLE 1 NONPROPRIETARY NAMES AND TRADE CHEMICAL PREPARATIONS, USUAL DOSES, AND NAMES STRUCTURE ROUTES OF ADMINISTRATION* Amyl nitrite (isoamyl nitrite) Inh: 0.18 or 0.3 ml, inhalation Nitroglycerin (glyceryl trinitrate; NITRO-BID, NITROSTAT, NITROL, NITRO-DUR, others) T: S: C: B: O: D: IV: 0.15 to 0.6 mg as needed 0.4 mg per spray as needed 2.5 to 9 mg two to four times daily 1 mg every 3 to 5 h 1.25 to 5 cm (½ to 2 in.), topically to skin every 4 to 8 h 1 disc (2.5 to 15 mg) every 24 h 5 μg/min; increments of 5 μg/min Isosorbide dinitrate (ISORDIL, SORBITRATE, DILATRATE, others) T: T(C): T(O): C: 2.5 to 10 mg every 2 to 3 h 5 to 10 mg every 2 to 3 h 10 to 40 mg every 6 h 40 to 80 mg every 8 to 12 h Isosorbide-5-mononitrate (IMDUR, ISMO, others) T: C: 10 to 40 mg twice daily 60 mg daily Erythrityl tetranitrate (CARDILATE) T: T(O): 5 to 10 mg as needed 10 mg three times daily - As used herein, “intracavernosal” injection is injection into the corpus cavernosum of the penis.
- As used herein, an “erection” refers to the condition of a penis whereby it is at least semi-rigid as opposed to being in a flaccid state.
- As used herein, “by oral administration” refers to the introduction of a pharmaceutical composition into a subject by way of the oral cavity (e.g., in aqueous liquid or solid form).
- As used herein, “cutaneously” refers to the introduction of a pharmaceutical composition into a subject by application to the surface of the skin such that the composition is absorbed into the subject.
- As used herein, “transurethrally” refers to the introduction of a pharmaceutical composition to the urethra of a subject such that the composition is absorbed into the subject.
- As used herein, “sufficient for vaginal penetration” refers to the state of an erection such that the penis is capable of entering a vagina without manual manipulation.
- As used herein, “sexual stimulation” refers to activity that would induce an erection in a male without erectile dysfunction (e.g., sexually explicit media, manual manipulation, vibration, live erotic entertainment, etc.)
- As used herein, “sexually explicit media” refers to films, videos, books, magazines, etc. that depict sexual activity.
- As used herein “single dosage” refers to a pharmaceutical composition of a formulation that is capable of achieving its intended effect in a single application.
- The present invention provides relates to methods for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in males and females (including but not limited to erectile dysfunction in males) in particular treatment groups. The methods of the present invention comprise the utilization of pharmaceutical compositions to patients who are free of symptoms of cardiac disease and who have not been treated with drugs which cause hypotensive effects, such as nitrites and nitrates. The compositions comprise quinolines and quinolones, including derivatives thereof.
- In one embodiment flosequinan is administered. Importantly, flosequinan may potentiate the hypotensive effects of nitrates, and its administration to patients who are concurrently using organic nitrates in any form may be contraindicated.
- In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates the use of compositions that are effective to induce an erection in a human male suffering from impotence of any origin, other than anatomical deficiencies (i.e., lacking a penis or a significant portion thereof) that preclude an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration. In particular, these compositions may be used to induce an erection in a male suffering from impotence caused by severe atherosclerosis, and also impotence that is neurogenic or psychogenic in origin. The compositions utilized in the methods of the present invention comprise quinolines and quinolones, including derivatives thereof.
- While the present invention is not limited by the nature of the derivatives, in one embodiment, the present invention encompasses the use of a variety of quinoline derivatives (e.g., 5-bromoquinoline, 5-nitroisoquinoline, 8-nitroisoquinoline and 1-methylisoquinoline). One skilled in the art can readily produce such derivatives as set forth in McMurry, Organic Chemistry, 2nd Ed., Brooks/Cole Publishing, Belmont, Calif. (1988), pages 1044-1045 and 1076.
- In another embodiment, the present invention contemplates the use of methylthio and methylsulphinyl derivatives of quinoline. In a preferred embodiment, the methylsulphinyl derivative is flosequinan (7-fluoro-1-methyl-3-methylsulphinyl-4-quinolone).
- Methods of producing methylsuphinyl and methylthio derivatives of quinoline, including flosequinan, are set forth in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,079,264 and 5,011,931 to MacLean et al., hereby incorporated by reference. While it is not necessary to understand any particular mechanism to carry out the present invention, it is believed that in some circumstances flosequinan can act as a direct-acting vasodilator to relax the corpus cavernosum smooth muscle cells, which in turn increases blood flow into the cavernosa space. This then leads to increased cavernosa pressure to produce an erect penis.
- The action of flosequinan in the body is not precisely understood. Its activity in the body is attributed to flosequinan itself, as well as its sulfone metabolite. It has been reported to be useful to some degree in the treatment of heart failure. [See Kelso et al., J. Cardiovasc. Pharmacol. 25:376 (1995)]. However, its action appears to have little effect in patients with end-stage failure [Perreault et al., Br. J. Pharmacol. 106:511 (1992)] and does not affect mortality or arrhythmias following coronary artery ligation [Jones et al., Br. J. Pharmacol. 108:1111(1993)].
- Likewise, flosequinan has been reported to be a selective inhibitor of phosphodiesterase III [Gristwood et al., Br. J. Pharmacol. 105:985 (1992)]. [Frodsham et al., Eur. J. Pharmacol. 211:383 (1992)], however, report that the phosphodiesterase inhibition of flosequinan, as relevant to its efficacy in heart failure, is questionable. Thus, the application of flosequinan to particular purposes in the body is not well-characterized and must be determined empirically.
- Diagnosis of Male Erectile Dysfunction
- Determination whether a human male is suffering from impotence that is substantially only neurogenic or psychogenic is readily made by a person skilled in the art using a number of readily available diagnostic procedures. Thus, a male suffering from impotence can first be given a physical examination with particular attention to possible penile and scrotal pathology, whereby any anatomical deficiency precluding an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration can be detected. In the absence of such an anatomical deficiency, the male can be subjected to tests, whereby penile venous leakage or severe or untreatable atherosclerosis can be detected.
- Such tests include determination of the penobrachial blood pressure index (PBPI), doppler investigation of the penile arteries, and a papaverine test. The PBPI is the penile systolic blood pressure divided by the systolic blood pressure determined at one of the arms. These blood pressures can be determined by any number of standard techniques. Thus, the penile systolic blood pressure can be determined by i) placing an inflatable cuff around the base of the free part of the penis in the flaccid state which is capable of being used to apply variable pressure, readable from a gauge, to an object around which the cuff is placed, ii) localizing the penile arteries with a Doppler ultrasound probe (e.g., 8 MHz probe, such as the Mini Doplex D500 available from Huntleigh Technology, Luton, United Kingdom), and then iii) inflating and deflating the cuff and ascertaining the pressure at which the Doppler sound reappears.
- The pressure at which the Doppler sound reappears is the penile systolic blood pressure. A male's penile blood pressure is regarded as normal if his PBPI is >0.80. With regard to Doppler investigation, each of the two penile cavernous arteries is investigated distal to the aforementioned cuff using the Doppler ultrasound problem. The function of each of the two arteries is assessed by Doppler ultrasound using an arbitrary scale of 0, 1, 2 or 3, where 0 means that the function is so deficient that the artery cannot be located and 3 means that the artery is well enough that maximal Doppler sound is observed.
- In the papaverine test, a tourniquet is placed at the base of the free part of the penis and tightened and then, with the patient seated, 30 mg of papaverine in 1 ml of a physiologically acceptable fluid (e.g., physiological saline or phosphate-buffered saline) is injected into the penile cavernous body. In persons suspected of having impotence due to a suprasacral nerve lesion or a psychogenic dysfunction, only 15 mg of papaverine is administered, because of the high incidence of papaverine-induced priapism in such cases.
- Five minutes after the injection, the tourniquet is removed and an ultrasound Doppler investigation of the penile cavernous arteries is carried out as described above. The function of the arteries is regarded as normal if both of them score a 3 on the arbitrary scale. After the Doppler investigation, penile vibration, at about a 4 Hz with an amplitude of about 1.2 mm (carried out with, e.g., a Vibrector, from Multicept, Gentofte, Denmark) is carried out for five to ten minutes and then erectile response is evaluated.
- Erectile response is classified as full rigidity, if the angle between the penis and the legs in the standing position is >90°, and tumescence or no response if the angle is less than or equal to 45°. An impotent male, who does not have an anatomical deficiency that would preclude having an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration, who has a PBPI >0.80, who has scores of 2 or 3 in Doppler ultrasound investigations of both of the cavernous arteries of the penis, after papaverine injection as described above, and who has a fully rigid erection after papaverine injection and vibration as described above, is suffering from impotence that is “substantially only neurogenic or psychogenic” in origin.
- It is possible that atherosclerosis or venous leakage contributes to such impotence, and atherosclerosis likely does contribute if the score is less than 3 in the Doppler investigation of one or both of the cavernous arteries after papaverine injection; but any venous leakage or atherosclerosis in such impotence is not untreatable and, consequently, is not a substantial factor in the impotence and such atherosclerosis, if any, is less than severe.
- Impotence, which is a side-effect of drugs such as beta-blockers, is deemed to be neurogenic impotence in the present specification. Similarly, impotence which is a result of alcoholism or excessive consumption of alcohol, is deemed to be neurogenic or psychogenic impotence, for purposes of the present specification. Thus, a male who is diagnosed in accordance with the present specification as suffering from impotence that is “substantially only neurogenic or psychogenic” in origin is suffering from impotence that is substantially only neurogenic, psychogenic or neurogenic and psychogenic in origin, even though an underlying cause of the impotence has been identified as a side-effect of a drug, alcoholism or excessive consumption of alcohol.
- Generally, a male with a PBPI less than about 0.60, with scores of 0 in Doppler investigations of both penile cavernous arteries (after papaverine injection as described above), and with a less than fully rigid erection after papaverine injection and vibration will have impotence caused by “untreatable” atherosclerosis. Methods are available to ascertain whether impotence is untreatable because of venous leakage.
- One method of ascertaining whether untreatable venous leakage is a cause of impotence is by cavernosometry, optionally supplemented with cavernosography. [See, e.g., Delcour et al., Radiology 161:799 (1986); Porst et al., J. Urol. 137:1163 (1987); Lue et al., J. Urol. 37:829 (1987)]. Cavernosometry can be done using, both before and after intracavernosal injection of 60 mg of papaverine (in 1 ml of physiological saline), infusion of physiological saline through a 19-gauge needle into one corpus cavernosum with a 21-gauge needle inserted into the other corpus cavernosum for measurement of intracorporal pressure (which is recorded on a plotter).
- The infusion rates needed to induce and maintain an erection are measured. If the infusion rate needed to maintain an erection is greater than 50 ml/min before administration of the papaverine and greater than 15 ml/min after administration of the papaverine, untreatable venous leakage is present. As long as an erection can be achieved at some flow rate less than about 100 m/min before injection of the papaverine and less than about 50 ml/min after the injection of papaverine, it might be possible, using cavernosography, to locate the venous lesion associated with the leakage, and thereby confirm the diagnosis based on cavernosometry and provide information for possible surgical correction for the leakage. In the cavernosography, the penis is X-rayed, both before and after intracavernosal injection of 60 mg papaverine (in 1 ml of physiological saline), while infusing contrast medium into the corpus cavernosum (e.g., through a 19-gauge needle) at a flow rate that maintains an erection during the x-raying. Numerous contrast media suitable for the procedure are available in the art; these are typically aqueous solutions of iodinated compounds that provide between about 180 mg/ml and about 360 mg/ml of iodine. Examples are a solution of iohexol providing 240 mg/ml of iodine sold by Winthrop Pharmaceuticals, New York, N.Y., USA, and a solution of iopamidol providing 300 mg/ml iodine sold by Astra Meditec, Goteborg, Sweden. Typically 50-100 ml of the contrast medium will be employed for each x-ray (i.e., before and then after the injection of papaverine). In the cavernosometry and cavernosography, 30 mg papaverine (in 1 ml physiological saline) coupled with stimulation by vibration can be employed in place of 60 mg papaverine (in 1 ml physiological saline).
- Treatment of Male Erectile Dysfunction
- It is not intended that the present invention be limited by the particular nature of the therapeutic preparation. For example, the quinolines or quinolone derivatives (e.g., flosequinan) can be provided together with physiologically tolerable liquid, gel or solid carriers, diluents, adjuvants and excipients. In addition, quinoline or quinolone analogs may be used together with other chemotherapeutic agents. On the other hand, formulations may also contain such normally employed additives as binders, fillers, carriers, preservatives, stabilizing agents, emulsifiers, buffers and excipients as, for example, pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharin, cellulose, magnesium carbonate, and the like. These compositions typically contain 1%-95% of active ingredient, preferably 2%-70%.
- The present invention is not limited by the method of introduction of the therapeutic compound to the body. Among other methods, the present invention contemplates administering cutaneously, orally, intracavernosally, transurethrally or by standard injection.
- Oral administration of flosequinan is effective, with a mean absolute bioavailability of 72% following a single does of fifty milligrams. Peak plasma concentrations of flosequinan are observed 1-2 hours following oral administration, while peak metabolite plasma levels are observed about seven hours following oral dosage. While the present invention is not limited to a specific dosage level, for adult humans, in one embodiment the dosage is a single dosage per day of 50 milligrams, while in another embodiment the dosage is a single dosage per day of 75 milligrams.
- Flosequinan is water soluble and is soluble in many organic solvents. Thus, while the present invention is not limited by the form of oral administration, aqueous and organic solution of flosequinan for oral administration is contemplated. Likewise, flosequinan can be associated with a solid pharmaceutical carrier for solid oral administration (i.e., in pill form). One skilled in the art is able to readily prepare such solid formulations, and in one embodiment, the inactive ingredients include croscarmellose sodium, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, lactose, magnesium stearate, methocel E5, microcrystalline cellulose, povidine, propylene glycol and titanium dioxide.
- Flosequinan may also be administered cutaneously in a carrier adapted for topical administration. Such carriers include creams, ointments, lotions, pastes, jellies, sprays, aerosols, bath oils, or other pharmaceutical carriers which accomplish direct contact between flosequinan and the pore of the skin. In general pharmaceutical preparations may comprise from about 0.001% to about 10%, and preferably from about 0.01 to 5% by w/w of the active compound (e.g., flosequinan) in a suitable carrier. In some cases it may be necessary to dissolve the flosequinan in an appropriate solvent such as ethanol or DMSO (dimethylsulfoxide), and the like, to facilitate incorporation into a pharmaceutical preparation. Likewise, the present invention can be incorporated in other products associated with sexual activity. For example, a coated, erection inducing condom as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,829,991, hereby incorporated by reference, and can be utilized with flosequinan or flosequinan in a pharmaceutical carrier as described above.
- While the present invention is not limited by a specific method of introducing flosequinan intracavernosally, injection of flosequinan can be carried out by any conventional injection means (e.g., employing an hypodermic syringe and needle or a similar device such as the NovolinPen. sold by Squibb-Novo, Inc., Princeton, N.J., USA). This injection may be by subject injecting himself or by another person (such as a partner during sexual relations or a physician prior to sexual relations) injecting the male whose erection is to be induced. Methods for intracavernosal injection are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,912 to Gerstenberg et al., hereby incorporated by reference.
- Flosequinan can be introduced intracavernosally in a physiologically acceptable composition. Such compositions are aqueous solutions that are physiologically acceptable for administration by intracavernosal injection into the penis. The physiologically acceptable carrier is selected such that it is not painful or irritating upon intracavernosal injection. The physiologically acceptable compositions will preferably be sterile at the time of administration by intracavernosal injection.
- Among the physiologically acceptable compositions for use in the methods is physiological saline or phosphate buffered saline, in which flosequinan is dissolved or suspended, such that the resulting composition is suitable for intracavernosal injection. Such a physiologically acceptable composition can also include a non-irritant preservative, such as, e.g., benzalkonium chloride at 0.05% (w/v) to 0./2% (w/v). As the skilled artisan will understand, there are numerous non-toxic salts of VIP, PHM and α-adrenergic blockers that can be employed in a physiologically acceptable composition for use in the methods herein, including, among others, the chloride, bromide, acetate, sulfate, and mesylate salts.
- In carrying out the methods, it is preferred that, for a period of time between about 1 minute and about 15 minutes (preferably about 5 minutes-10 minutes), the penis is constricted near the base thereof and between the base and the point at which the injection into a corpus cavernosum occurs, in order to limit loss of injected fluid from the corpus cavernosum before the ingredients in the fluid, that are active in inducing erection, have been able to have erection-inducing effects. The constriction can be effected by any means known in the art, such as with a tourniquet, cuff, rubber band or the like, or even manually, in order to slow the release of the injected fluid and the pharmacologically active substance(s) therein into the general circulation.
- Likewise, the present invention is not limited by a particular method for introducing flosequinan transurethrally. In one embodiment, flosequinan is introduced to the urethra in a carrier as described for cutaneous administration. Devices and methods for transurethral introduction of pharmaceutical compositions is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,474,535 to Place et al.; Voss, U.S. Pat. No. 4,801,587 and Kock, EPA 0357581, all hereby incorporated by reference.
- Additional methods of introducing flosequinan transurethrally include the use of medicated catheters, such as those used to prevent or treat localized infections and irritation of the urethra and bladder (See U.S. Pat. No. 4,640,912, hereby incorporated by reference). Alternatively, transurethral administration of pharmaceutical compositions is presented in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,478,822, 4,610,868, 4,640,912 and 4,746,508, all hereby incorporated by reference, and medicated urethral suppositories, inserts or plugs, typically containing anti-infective agents or spermicide are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 1,897,423, 2,584,166, 2,696,209 and 3,373,746, all incorporated by reference.
- While the present invention is not limited to the method of injecting flosequinan, in the preferred embodiment, it is injected with a standard syringe. One skilled in the art would be capable of injecting flosequinan with a carrier as described for intracavernosal injection.
- In one embodiment, the administration of the compositions of the present invention is accompanied by sexual stimulation to induce an erection. The sexual stimulation can begin before or after the introduction of flosequinan. If the stimulation begins after the injection, it is preferably begun within 5 to 10 minutes to insure that there is significant overlap of the pharmacological effects of the pharmaceutical composition administered and the stimulative effects of the sexual stimulation. Whether the stimulation begins before or after the injection, it will continue preferably at least until an erection sufficient for vaginal penetration is achieved.
- Sexual stimulation as prescribed by these methods, includes any form of sexual stimulation that would induce an erection in a normal male who is not suffering from erectile insufficiency. The sexual stimulation can be that which occurs in the course of sexual relations between the subject and another person or can be outside sexual relations with another person. Examples of methods of sexual stimulation include, alone or in combination, touching or erotically manipulating erogenous areas of the genital organs or other erogenous parts of the body; providing visual stimulation, as with a sexually explicit media (e.g., pornographic film) or other form of sexually stimulative show or display. Additionally, providing vibratory stimulation to the penis, at between about 30 Hz and about 100 Hz with an amplitude of about 1 mm to about 5 ram, as can be provided, for example, by resting the penis on the table of a vibrating apparatus such as that of a Vibrector system (Multicept, Genofte, Denmark).
- In inducing an erection in an impotent male outside of sexual relations, as, for example, when a physician induces an erection in a patient suffering from psychogenic impotence, a preferred method of sexual stimulation includes providing visual stimulation, as with a pornographic film, simultaneously with vibratory stimulation of the penis, as with a Vibrector system set to between about 30 Hz and about 60 Hz (usually about 50 Hz) in frequency and between about 1 mm and about 2.5 mm (usually about 2.2 mm) in amplitude.
- From the above, it should be clear that the present invention provides methods of treatment of male erectile dysfunction with pharmaceutical agents. In particular, quinolines and quinolones are administered therapeutically to patients having such dysfunction.
Claims (30)
1. A method, comprising:
a) providing:
i) a subject diagnosed with erectile dysfunction who is free of cardiac disease; and
ii) a therapeutic formulation comprising a quinoline; and
b) introducing said formulation to said subject such that an erection is produced.
2. The method of claim 1 , wherein said quinoline is a halogenated quinoline.
3. The method of claim 2 , wherein said halogenated quinoline is flosequinan.
4. The method of claim 3 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject by oral administration.
5. The method of claim 4 , wherein said subject is an adult human and said oral administration comprises up to approximately 100 milligrams of flosequinan.
6. The method of claim 3 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject cutaneously.
7. The method of claim 3 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject transurethrally.
8. The method of claim 3 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject intracavernosally.
9. The method of claim 1 , wherein said subject is a male.
10. The method of claim 1 , wherein said subject is a female.
11. A method, comprising:
a) providing:
i) a subject diagnosed with erectile dysfunction, wherein said subject is not being treated with a drug that causes hypotensive effects; and
ii) a therapeutic formulation comprising a quinoline; and
b) introducing said formulation to said subject such that an erection is produced.
12. The method of claim 11 , wherein said quinoline is a halogenated quinoline.
13. The method of claim 12 , wherein said halogenated quinoline is flosequinan.
14. The method of claim 13 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject by oral administration.
15. The method of claim 13 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject cutaneously.
16. The method of claim 13 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject transurethrally.
17. The method of claim 13 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject intracavernosally.
18. The method of claim 11 , wherein said subject is a male.
19. The method of claim 11 , wherein said subject is a female.
20. The method of claim 11 , wherein said subject has not been treated in the past with a drug that causes hypotensive effects.
21. A method, comprising:
a) providing:
i) a subject diagnosed with erectile dysfunction, wherein said subject is not being treated with a nitrite or nitrate; and
ii) a therapeutic formulation comprising a quinoline; and
b) introducing said formulation to said subject such that an erection is produced.
22. The method of claim 21 , wherein said quinoline is a halogenated quinoline.
23. The method of claim 22 , wherein said halogenated quinoline is flosequinan.
24. The method of claim 23 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject by oral administration.
25. The method of claim 23 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject cutaneously.
26. The method of claim 23 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject transurethrally.
27. The method of claim 23 , wherein said flosequinan is introduced into said subject intracavernosally.
28. The method of claim 21 , wherein said subject is a male.
29. The method of claim 21 , wherein said subject is a female.
30. The method of claim 21 , wherein said nitrate is selected from the group consisting of glyceryl trinitrate, isosorbide dinitrate, isosorbide-5-mononitrate and erythrityl tetranitrate.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/208,410 US20030105128A1 (en) | 1998-05-01 | 2002-07-30 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/071,457 US6110489A (en) | 1998-05-01 | 1998-05-01 | Use of quinolines and quinolones to treat male erectile dysfunction |
| US09/597,317 US6426084B1 (en) | 2000-06-19 | 2000-06-19 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
| US10/208,410 US20030105128A1 (en) | 1998-05-01 | 2002-07-30 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
Related Parent Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/597,317 Continuation US6426084B1 (en) | 1998-05-01 | 2000-06-19 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20030105128A1 true US20030105128A1 (en) | 2003-06-05 |
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Family Applications (2)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/597,317 Expired - Fee Related US6426084B1 (en) | 1998-05-01 | 2000-06-19 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
| US10/208,410 Abandoned US20030105128A1 (en) | 1998-05-01 | 2002-07-30 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
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|---|---|---|---|
| US09/597,317 Expired - Fee Related US6426084B1 (en) | 1998-05-01 | 2000-06-19 | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
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| US (2) | US6426084B1 (en) |
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| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US6426084B1 (en) * | 2000-06-19 | 2002-07-30 | Neal R. Cutler | Treatment of sexual dysfunction in certain patient groups |
| WO2017168174A1 (en) | 2016-04-02 | 2017-10-05 | N4 Pharma Uk Limited | New pharmaceutical forms of sildenafil |
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US6426084B1 (en) | 2002-07-30 |
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Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| AS | Assignment |
Owner name: R.T. ALAMO VENTURES I, LLC, CALIFORNIA Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:CUTLER, NEAL R.;REEL/FRAME:014018/0285 Effective date: 20021021 |
|
| STCB | Information on status: application discontinuation |
Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO PAY ISSUE FEE |