Table of Contents
- What THEOPHYLLINE ANHYDROUS is in these trials
- Clinical trial in post-dural puncture headache (PDPH)
- What outcomes were measured in the PDPH trial
- Side effects monitored in the PDPH trial
- Clinical study in chronic total coronary occlusion (CTO) imaging
- Key imaging definitions and endpoints in the CTO study
What THEOPHYLLINE ANHYDROUS is in these trials
In the provided clinical trial records, the drug appears as an oral tablet used to treat headache after a dural puncture and as an intravenous solution for injection used in a cardiovascular imaging study.[1][2]
One listed “other name” (synonym/brand name) for the oral tablet is Quibron-T/SR tablets.[1]
The cardiovascular study lists synonyms for the active substance such as ANHYDROUS THEOPHYLLINE and “THEOPHYLLINE (ANHYDROUS).”[2]
Clinical trial in post-dural puncture headache (PDPH)
This study asked whether oral theophylline is more effective than oral sumatriptan for treating PDPH.[1]
The trial describes PDPH as a frequent complication after procedures involving dural puncture for spinal anesthesia or after accidental dural puncture during epidural anesthesia.[1]
It was a prospective, randomized, double-blind, phase four clinical trial that included 60 patients with PDPH, split into two equal groups of 30 patients each.[1]
The theophylline group received an oral theophylline tablet at 150 mg every 12 hours.[1]
The comparator group received oral sumatriptan succinate at 25 mg every 12 hours.[1]
What outcomes were measured in the PDPH trial
The main outcome was pain severity measured with the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS), which is an 11-point scale from 0 to 10 where 0 means no pain and 10 means the worst possible pain.[1]
Pain scores were collected before treatment and then at 2, 6, 12, 18, and 24 hours, then every 12 hours until 48 hours after starting treatment.[1]
The trial planned to report NPRS results as both median (range) and mean ± standard deviation over the 48-hour timeframe.[1]
A secondary outcome was the duration of PDPH (in hours), defined as the time from headache onset until the NPRS score became 3 or less.[1]
Another secondary outcome was the length of hospital stay (in days), measured from hospital admission until discharge, over the same 48-hour evaluation period.[1]
Side effects monitored in the PDPH trial
The study tracked the number and rate of treatment-related side effects within 48 hours after starting treatment.[1]
Side effects listed for monitoring included palpitations (feeling of fast or irregular heartbeat), dizziness, gastric irritation (stomach irritation), nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, warm sensations in the body, tingling sensation, and tightness in the chest, throat, neck, or jaws.[1]
Clinical study in chronic total coronary occlusion (CTO) imaging
Another provided record describes a study in patients with chronic total occlusion of a coronary artery (a long-lasting complete blockage of a heart artery).[2]
The main objective was to evaluate how well coronary CT angiography with myocardial perfusion imaging at stress and rest matches (concordance) stress cardiac MRI for detecting ischemia and viability in CTO patients.[2]
In this study record, the drug listed is an IV product containing the active substance THEOPHYLLINE ANHYDROUS (route: intravenous), with a listed maximum daily dose amount of 200 mg and a maximum treatment period of 4 (time unit code provided in the record).[2]
The product name shown is “Eufilina Venosa 200 mg solution for injection.”[2]
Key imaging definitions and endpoints in the CTO study
The study’s primary endpoints include measures of viability, myocardial ischemia, and how CTO is defined and classified.[2]
For viability, one imaging criterion was “late enhancement” in more than 50% of the thickness of the affected myocardial wall using the 17-segment model, reported as the number of segments meeting the criterion.[2]
Another viability criterion looked at mean myocardial thickness less than 5 mm or 3 mm in segments with movement (motility) impairment, also counted by number of segments meeting the criterion.[2]
For myocardial ischemia, the study defined it as an inducible and persistent perfusion defect during stress that significantly improves or resolves at rest and exceeds the extent of myocardial scar in the same segment on late enhancement images, again reported as the number of segments showing ischemia.[2]
The CTO definition was absence of antegrade coronary flow through the coronary stenosis, allowing that there may be collateral flow as long as there is no flow through the lesion.[2]
The study planned to classify CTO as definite if there is evidence the occlusion lasted more than three months, and probable if duration evidence is not available.[2]
Secondary endpoints and methods included baseline cardiac MRI and follow-up at 6 months, CT imaging as part of routine pre-procedural evaluation, adverse event definitions using CTO-ARC, and arrhythmogenic substrate evaluation using late enhancement images and specified software.[2]



