A proven treatment for Cervical Dystonia for over 20 years1,2

In the pivotal study, Cervical Dystonia patients showed significant, meaningful improvements in head position and a decrease in neck pain with BOTOX®3

BOTOX® significantly improved head position vs placebo at Week 6

Head Position Improvement5

The Cervical Dystonia Severity Scale (CDSS) quantifies the severity of abnormal head positioning and was devised for this study. CDSS allots 1 point for each 5 degrees (or part thereof) of head deviation in each of the 3 planes of head movement (range of scores up to the theoretical maximum of 54).

Patients With Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment Scale4

The Physician Global Assessment Scale is a 9 category scale scoring the physician’s evaluation of the patients’ status compared to baseline, ranging from -4 to +4 (very marked worsening to complete improvement), with 0 indicating no change from baseline and +1 slight improvement.

Clinical improvement generally begins within the first 2 weeks after injection, with maximum clinical benefit at approximately 6 weeks post-injection. In the pivotal study, most subjects were observed to have returned to pretreatment status by 3 months post-treatment3

BOTOX® significantly improved head position vs placebo at week 6

  • Clinical improvement generally begins within the first 2 weeks after injection, with maximum clinical benefit at approximately 6 weeks post-injection. In the pivotal study, most subjects were observed to have returned to pretreatment status by 3 months post-treatment3
  • 62% of BOTOX® patients had an improvement on the Physician Global Assessment scale vs 42% for placebo (P < 0.05)4

aThe Cervical Dystonia Severity Scale (CDSS) quantifies the severity of abnormal head positioning and was devised for this study. CDSS allots 1 point for each 5 degrees (or part thereof) of head deviation in each of the 3 planes of head movement (range of scores up to the theoretical maximum of 54).

BOTOX® significantly improved head position vs placebo at week 6

Head Position Improvement3,4,a

  • Clinical improvement generally begins within the first 2 weeks after injection, with maximum clinical benefit at approximately 6 weeks post-injection. In the pivotal study, most subjects were observed to have returned to pretreatment status by 3 months post-treatment3
  • 62% of BOTOX® patients had an improvement on the Physician Global Assessment scale vs 42% for placebo (P < 0.05)4

aThe Cervical Dystonia Severity Scale (CDSS) quantifies the severity of abnormal head positioning and was devised for this study. CDSS allots 1 point for each 5 degrees (or part thereof) of head deviation in each of the 3 planes of head movement (range of scores up to the theoretical maximum of 54).

BOTOX® conducted the first pivotal study in Cervical Dystonia3-5

DUAL PRIMARY ENDPOINT
  • Change in CDSS* at Week 6
  • Percentage of patients with any improvement on Physician Global Assessment Scale at Week 6
SECONDARY ENDPOINTS
  • Change in pain intensity at Week 6
  • Change in pain frequency at Week 6

*CDSS = Cervical Dystonia Severity Scale.

Study Design

Clinical study of BOTOX® vs placebo3,4

Significant reductions in neck pain intensity and frequency with BOTOX®

Decrease in Pain Intensity3,4,a

Starting at 2 weeks post injection, BOTOX® significantly reduced neck pain intensity vs placebo with the primary efficacy time point at 6 weeks (P < 0.05)4

Decrease in Pain Frequency3,4,a

aPain intensity was evaluated on a scale of 0 (no pain) to 4 (very severe in intensity).

bPain frequency was evaluated on a scale of 0 (no pain) to 4 (constant in frequency).

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