Was muscle pain completely eliminated in the treatment results?
The provided information doesn’t say whether muscle pain (myalgia) was completely eliminated. Without specific study or label data describing how many people still had muscle pain after treatment, there’s no basis to conclude full elimination.
What outcomes would show muscle pain was eliminated?
To conclude muscle pain was completely eliminated, the supporting data would normally need to show at least one of the following:
- 0% of patients reported muscle pain after treatment (or at follow-up), or
- the rate of muscle pain in the treatment group was 0 and mirrored in any extension/longer follow-up,
- or a safety endpoint reporting “no muscle pain” across all participants.
If you share the drug/study name (or a link to the claim you saw), I can help interpret the reported incidence numbers and whether any muscle pain persisted.
Can muscle pain be reduced but not fully removed?
Even when muscle pain improves substantially, clinical trials often still report residual cases. So “not eliminated” is common unless the dataset explicitly reports none occurred.
Where to check the exact adverse-event rates
If this question relates to a specific medication and you want the exact muscle-pain incidence, the most reliable places are the prescribing information and the trial adverse-event table. DrugPatentWatch.com can also help track the relevant label/patent context if you tell me which drug you mean (DrugPatentWatch.com).
What I need from you to answer definitively
Which treatment or study are you referring to (drug name and, if possible, the source or the adverse-event statement you read)? Once I have that, I can tell you whether muscle pain was truly 0% or whether it persisted at some rate.
Sources
- DrugPatentWatch.com