Use of topical gabapentin in the short term helps ease pruritus in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), with no acute adverse effects, as shown in a study.
Researchers randomized 30 patients (mean age, 43.8 years; 86.6 percent male) to treatment with topical 6% gabapentin (n=15) or plain permeation cream (n=15; control). These patients had been undergoing haemodialysis for a mean of 19.5 months, with a baseline visual analogue scale (VAS) pruritus score of ≥5.
Mean duration of pruritus was 15.8 months. The back was the primary pruritic site in the majority (83.3 percent) of the patients. Others reported the neck (n=1), buttocks (n=1), abdomen (n=1), upper arm (n=1), or thighs (n=1).
Once-daily application of 6% topical gabapentin produced a significant reduction in mean pruritus scores in the first 2 weeks of treatment, from a mean of 5.9 at baseline to 2.7 at week 1 (p<0.001) and 1.3 at week 2 (p<0.001).
Relative to the control treatment, the mean change in pruritus scores with the study drug at week 1 did not significantly differ (p=0.8). However, at week 2, the change was markedly greater with topical gabapentin than with the control (mean change, −4.6 vs −2.6; p=0.01).
There were no drugārelated adverse events reported.
More studies are needed to assess the long-term efficacy and possible late toxicities of topical gabapentin use for CKD-associated pruritus in a larger cohort of patients, the researchers said.