News

Progesterone largely ineffective in treatment of traumatic brain injuries


 

FROM THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE

References

“Despite extensive preclinical data and two promising single-center trials, progesterone was not associated with any benefit over placebo, as measured by the GOS-E score at 6 months, in this large, multicenter clinical trial,” wrote lead author Dr. David W. Wright of Emory University, Atlanta, and his associates.

“The PROTECT III trial joins a growing list of negative or inconclusive trials in the arduous search for a treatment for TBI. To date, no treatment has succeeded at the confirmatory trial stage,” the researchers noted.

The SYNAPSE trial was funded by BHR Pharma, a division of Besins Healthcare. PROTECT III was funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences; the Emory Emergency Neurosciences Laboratory at Emory University, Atlanta; and Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta. Several coauthors for each study had their own disclosures, as well.

dchitnis@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

Pediatric epilepsy surgery improved mood, behavior in some patients
MDedge Psychiatry
NIH announces major funding support for concussion, TBI research
MDedge Psychiatry
TBI survivors see threefold risk of early death
MDedge Psychiatry
Pseudobulbar affect: More common than you’d think
MDedge Psychiatry
Pseudobulbar affect common in vets with mild TBI
MDedge Psychiatry
Disability rates from blast-related, nonblast TBI similar
MDedge Psychiatry
Mild TBI may predict PTSD, not postconcussion syndrome
MDedge Psychiatry
Biomarker test may allow immediate diagnosis of concussion
MDedge Psychiatry
Traumatic brain injury in adolescence increases likelihood of harmful behavior
MDedge Psychiatry
Hyperbaric oxygen no better than placebo for treating postconcussion symptoms in military
MDedge Psychiatry