| Literature DB >> 28778859 |
Takahiro Miyazaki1, Irene Y Choi1, Werner Rubas1, Neel K Anand1, Cherie Ali1, Juli Evans1, Hema Gursahani1, Marlene Hennessy1, Grace Kim1, Daniel McWeeney1, Juergen Pfeiffer1, Phi Quach1, David Gauvin1, Timothy A Riley1, Jennifer A Riggs1, Kathleen Gogas1, Jonathan Zalevsky1, Stephen K Doberstein2.
Abstract
The increasing availability of prescription opioid analgesics for the treatment of pain has been paralleled by an epidemic of opioid misuse, diversion, and overdose. The development of abuse-deterrent formulations (ADFs) of conventional opioids such as oxycodone and morphine represents an advance in the field and has had a positive but insufficient impact, as most opioids are still prescribed in highly abusable, non-ADF forms, and abusers can tamper with ADF medications to liberate the abusable opioid within. The abuse liability of mu-opioid agonists appears to be dependent on their rapid rate of entry into the central nervous system (CNS), whereas analgesic activity appears to be a function of CNS exposure alone, suggesting that a new opioid agonist with an inherently low rate of influx across the blood-brain barrier could mediate analgesia with low abuse liability, regardless of formulation or route of administration. NKTR-181 is a novel, long-acting, selective mu-opioid agonist with structural properties that reduce its rate of entry across the blood-brain barrier compared with traditional mu-opioid agonists. NKTR-181 demonstrated maximum analgesic activity comparable to that of oxycodone in hot-plate latency and acetic-acid writhing models. NKTR-181 was distinguishable from oxycodone by its reduced abuse potential in self-administration and progressive-ratio break point models, with behavioral effects similar to those of saline, as well as reduced CNS side effects as measured by the modified Irwin test. The in vitro and in vivo studies presented here demonstrate that NKTR-181 is the first selective mu-opioid agonist to combine analgesic efficacy and reduced abuse liability through the alteration of brain-entry kinetics.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28778859 DOI: 10.1124/jpet.117.243030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharmacol Exp Ther ISSN: 0022-3565 Impact factor: 4.030