Journal of International Medical Research (May 2024)

Efficacy and safety of fezolinetant for moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms associated with menopause among women in East Asia: a phase 3 randomized study (MOONLIGHT I)

  • Xiangyan Ruan,
  • Wenpei Bai,
  • Mulan Ren,
  • Tak Kim,
  • Ji Young Lee,
  • Fei-Chi Chuang,
  • Peng-Hui Wang,
  • Weizhong He,
  • Xiao Ma,
  • Kentaro Miyazaki,
  • Nan Song,
  • Xuegong Wang,
  • Qi Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/03000605241247684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52

Abstract

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Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of fezolinetant for moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms (VMS) associated with menopause in East Asian women. Methods In this phase 3, randomized, double-blind study, postmenopausal women with moderate to severe VMS (minimum average frequency in the 10 days before randomization, ≥7/day or 50/week) received fezolinetant 30 mg/day or placebo (weeks 1–12), followed by an open-label extension phase with fezolinetant 30 mg/day (weeks 13–24). The co-primary endpoints were the mean changes in the daily frequency and severity of VMS at weeks 4 and 12. Results Among 301 participants, the difference in the least squares mean change (95% confidence interval) from baseline in the daily frequency of moderate to severe VMS versus placebo was −0.65 (−1.41 to 0.12) at week 4 and −0.55 (−1.35 to 0.26) at week 12. The differences in the least squares mean change from baseline in the VMS severity score versus placebo were −0.06 (−0.14 to 0.03) and −0.13 (−0.27 to 0.01) at weeks 4 and 12, respectively. Serious adverse events occurred in 0.7% of participants receiving fezolinetant in weeks 1 to 12, compared with 1.3% of those receiving placebo. Conclusions Fezolinetant was generally safe but did not reduce the frequency or severity of VMS versus placebo in postmenopausal women in this study. ClinicalTrials.Gov Identifier: NCT04234204