A proven treatment for Cervical Dystonia for 20+ years

BOTOX® conducted the first pivotal study in Cervical Dystonia1-3

Week 2 was the first prespecified efficacy evaluation time point; primary endpoint was measured at 6 weeks.
 
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.

BOTOX® significantly improved head position at Week 63

Change in Head Position3

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).

Represents total patients randomized for each treatment group. At different follow-up time points, n-values range from 72 to 88 for BOTOX® and 58 to 82 for placebo.

Significant increase in the percentage of patients who showed on the Physician Global Assessment Scale at Week 63,†

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.

Represents total patients randomized for each treatment group. Sample size varied for each observed data point depending on the number of subjects available for follow-up.

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-treatment.1

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).

Study Design

Clinical study of BOTOX® vs placebo3,4

BOTOX® improved neck pain intensity and frequency associated with Cervical Dystonia beginning at 2 weeks

Significant improvement in neck pain intensity
at Week 6 (secondary endpoint)1,2,†

 

NOTE:

  • Week 2 was the first prespecified efficacy evaluation time point; primary endpoint was measured at 6 weeks.

Significant improvement in neck pain frequency
at Week 6 (secondary endpoint)1,2,†

 

NOTE:

  • Week 2 was the first prespecified efficacy evaluation time point; primary endpoint was measured at 6 weeks.

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

Represents total patients randomized for each treatment group. Sample size varied for each observed data point depending on the number of subjects available for follow-up.

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