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Poster 1597450

SURWEY Study of Solriamfetol: Initiation, Titration, Safety, Efficacy, and Follow-Up Experience for Patients with OSA in Germany

Charlotte Wincott, PhD

Psych Congress 2023
This study was funded by Axsome Therapeutics and Jazz Pharmaceuticals. This presentation was supported by Axsome Therapeutics and Pharmanovia. Introduction: Solriamfetol (Sunosi®) is a wake-promoting agent approved to treat excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) associated with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) (37.5–150 mg/day). This real-world study characterizes dosing/titration strategies among physicians and patient outcomes. Methods: SURWEY was a retrospective chart review by German physicians in 83 OSA patients. Eligible patients (≥18 years old, diagnosed with EDS due to OSA, reached stable Solriamfetol dose, completed ≥6 weeks of treatment) were classified as changeover (switched from existing EDS medication[s]), add-on (added to current EDS medication[s]), or new-to-therapy (no current EDS medication). Efficacy measures included the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS; 2-3 points represents a minimally clinically important difference), as well as patient- and physician- reported perceptions of improvement. Results: Patients’ mean±SD age was 49±14 years and 65% were male; all used primary airway therapy. New-to-therapy was the most common initiation strategy (n=62). Across subgroups, mean ESS scores at initiation and follow-up ranged from 15.9–16.6 and 10.4-12.2, with mean decreases from 5.3–5.7 points. Improvements in EDS were reported for most (patient-reported, 90%; physician-reported, 89%). Most patients reported solriamfetol effects lasting ≥6 hours (74%) with no change in night-time sleep quality (91%). Common adverse effects were headache, insomnia, and irritability. Conclusions: These real-world data describe Solriamfetol use in German OSA patients. Solriamfetol was typically initiated at 37.5 mg/day; titration was common. ESS improvements were greater than the minimum clinically important difference of 2-3, and most patients and physicians perceived improvement in EDS. Common adverse events were consistent with those previously reported for solriamfetol.

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