| Literature DB >> 30783472 |
Xi-Ding Yang1,2, Ping-Fei Fang1,2, Da-Xiong Xiang1,3, Yong-Yu Yang1,3.
Abstract
Diabetic neuropathic pain (DNP) has a huge impact on quality of life and can be difficult to treat. Oral treatment is the most frequently used method for DNP, but its use is often limited by systemic side effects. Topical use of drugs as an alternative option for DNP treatment is currently gaining interest. In the present review, a summary is provided of the available agents for topical use in patients with DNP, including lidocaine plasters or patches, capsaicin cream, gel or patches, amitriptyline cream, clonidine gel, ketamine cream, extracts from medicinal plants including nutmeg extracts and Citrullus colocynthis extract oil, and certain compounded topical analgesics. Furthermore, the potential efficacy of these treatments is addressed according to the available clinical research literature. It has been indicated that these topical drugs have the potential to be valuable additional options for the management of DNP, with adequate safety and continuous long-term treatment efficacy. Compounded topical agents are also effective and safe for patients with DNP and could be another area worthy of further investigation based on the strategy of using low-dose, complementary therapies for DNP. The findings indicate that developing topical drugs acting on different targets in the process of DNP is a valuable area of future research.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; diabetic neuropathic pain; diabetic neuropathy; topical treatments
Year: 2019 PMID: 30783472 PMCID: PMC6364237 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2019.7173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1.A summary of the pathogenesis of DNP. DNP, diabetic neuropathic pain; AGEs, advanced glycation end-products; TRPV1, transient receptor potential vanilloid 1.
Figure 2.Therapeutic targets of topical agents for DNP. AGEs, advanced glycation end-products; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TRPV1, transient receptor potential vanilloid 1; AMPA, a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-proprionic acid; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; DNP, diabetic neuropathic pain.
Summary of clinical studies on topical lidocaine for the treatment of DNP.
| Author, year | Topical agent(s) | Study design | No. of patients (% male) | Age, years (mean ± standard deviation) | Duration of pain | Outcomes | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baron | 5% Lidocaine plaster | Two-stage, adaptive, randomized, controlled, open-label, 4-week, multicenter trial that incorporated a drug wash-out phase of up to 2 weeks prior to the start of the comparative phase | Lidocaine: 47 (48.9) Pregabalin: 44 (54.5) | Lidocaine: 60.2±9.9 Pregabalin: 59.8±8.4 | ≥3 months | Showed similar analgesic efficacy, fewer DRAEs (3.9% vs. 39.2%) and fewer substantial discontinuations due to DRAEs (1.3 vs. 20.3%) than pregabalin. | ( |
| Baron | 5% Lidocaine plaster | Two-stage adaptive, randomized, open-label, 4-week, multicenter, non-inferiority study | Lidocaine: 105 (42.9) Pregabalin: 105 (46.7) | Lidocaine: 60.9±10.0 Pregabalin: 60.9±8.8 | ≥3 months | Showed comparable efficacy, greater improvements in QOL, and fewer AEs, DRAEs and related discontinuations compared with pregabalin. An 8-week combination phase of this study demonstrated additional decreases in NRS-3 scores. | ( |
| Barbano | 5% Lidocaine patch | Open-label, flexible-dosing, 3-week study with a 5-week extension | 56 (NA) | NA | ≥3 months | Significantly reduced pain and improved QOL. These benefits were maintained during an additional 5 weeks with tapering of concomitant analgesics. | ( |
| Argoff | 5% Lidocaine patch | Open-label, non-randomized, prospective, 2-week study | 41 (41.5) | 56.7±12.6 | NA | Effectively reduced the intensity of pain in patients with DNP. Well tolerated in combination with other analgesic regimens. No serious AEs or adverse drug interactions. | ( |
| White | 5% Lidocaine patch | Open-label, non-randomized, 2-week multicenter pilot trial. | 49 (46.9) | 57.7±12.6 | NA | Improved pain intensity and pain relief scores. | ( |
DNP, diabetic neuropathic pain; AE, adverse event; DRAE, drug-related adverse event; QOL, quality of life; NA, not available.
Summary of clinical studies on topical capsaicin for the treatment of DNP.
| Author, year | Topical agent(s) | Study design | No. of patients (% male) | Age, years (mean ± standard deviation) | Duration of pain | Outcomes | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chad | 0.075% Capsaicin cream | Double-blind, 4-week, multicenter, vehicle-controlled, randomized study | Capsaicin: 24 (NA) Vehicle: 22 (NA) | NA | NA | No obvious effects on pain relief | ( |
| The Capsaicin Study Group, 1991–1992 | 0.075% Capsaicin cream | Double-blind, 8-week, multicenter, vehicle-controlled parallel randomized study | Capsaicin: 138 (51.4) Vehicle: 139 (48.9) | Capsaicin: 60.1 (27–92)[ | NA | Well tolerated Effective for reducing pain Improved daily activities Enhanced QOL | ( |
| Tandan | 0.075% Capsaicin cream | Double-blind, 8-week, vehicle-controlled study with either 0.075% capsaicin cream or vehicle cream over the painful areas | Capsaicin: 11 (54.5) Vehicle: 11 (45.5) | Capsaicin: 55.1±7.6 Vehicle: 53.3±11.8 | NA | Decreased mean pain intensity Relieved mean pain scores No adverse effects on sensory thresholds Approximately 50% of subjects reported improved pain control or were cured in a follow-up open-label study | ( |
| Kulkantrakorn | 0.025% Capsaicin gel | Double-blind, 20-week, crossover, randomized, single-center study enrolling subjects with DNP | 33 (48.5) | 58.0 (35–76)[ | ≥1 month | Safe and well tolerated Did not provide significant pain relief | ( |
| Simpson | 8% Capsaicin patch | Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, 12-week, placebo-controlled, multicenter trial | Capsaicin: 186 (61.3) Placebo: 183 (55.2) | Capsaicin: 63.9±10.6 Placebo: 62.0±10.8 | ≥1 year | Provided modest and statistically significant improvements in pain relief Improved sleep quality Well tolerated Did not cause any sensory deterioration or new safety concerns | ( |
| Biesbroeck | 0.075% Capsaicin cream | Double-blind, 8-week, multicenter, parallel study compared the safety and efficacy of topical capsaicin and oral amitriptyline in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy | NA | NA | NA | Equally effective Considerably safer | ( |
| Vinik | 8% Capsaicin patch | Phase 3, multinational, open-label, randomized, controlled, 52-week safety study | Capsaicin 8% patch (30 min) + SOC: 156 (47.4) Capsaicin 8% patch (60 min) + SOC: 157 (50.3) SOC: 155 (45.8) | Capsaicin 8% patch (30 min) +SOC: 60.9±10.9 Capsaicin 8% patch (60 min) +SOC: 61.0±10.3 SOC: 59.1±10.3 | ≥1 year | In patients with PDPN, capsaicin 8% patch repeat treatment plus SOC over 52 weeks was well tolerated with no negative functional or neurological effects compared with SOC alone | ( |
Mean age (range). SOC, standard of care; DNP, diabetic neuropathic pain; PDPN, painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy; QOL, quality of life; NA, not available.
Summary of clinical studies on other topical agents for the treatment of DNP.
| Author, year | Topical agent(s) | Study design | No. of patients (% male) | Age, years (mean ± standard deviation) | Duration of pain | Outcomes | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ho | 5% Amitriptyline cream | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study | 35 (45.7) | 57.4±13.8 | ≥6 months | No significant change in pain intensity was observed with topical amitriptyline or placebo Topical lidocaine and placebo each reduced pain more than topical amitriptyline | ( |
| Kiani | 2% Amitriptyline cream | Double-blind, 12-week, randomized, and non-inferiority trial | Amitriptyline: 51 (33.3) Capsaicin: 51 (31.4) | Amitriptyline: 57.5±10.8 Capsaicin: 55.4±10.6 | ≥3 months | Both drugs significantly relieved pain in 12 weeks compared with baseline values. Well tolerated | ( |
| Campbell | 0.1 and 0.2% Clonidine gels | Double-blind, 8-week, randomized placebo-controlled trial | 0.1% clonidine: 54 (NA) 0.2% clonidine: 54 (NA) Placebo: 57 (NA) | NA | NA | The reduction in mean aggregate pain score from week 8 to baseline in subjects who received 0.1% gel was significantly greater compared with the placebo group. The reduction in pain for the 0.2% group was less impressive Adverse events were similar between the three groups. | ( |
| Campbell | 0.1% Clonidine gel | Double-blind, 12-week, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, multi-center trial | Clonidine: 89 (49) Placebo: 90 (47) | Clonidine: 59.4±9.9 Placebo: 57.6±9.5 | ≥6 months | Significantly reduced the level of pain Safe and without the problematic side effects typically associated with systemic therapies | ( |
| Motilal and Maharaj, 2013 | Nutmeg extract | Double-blind, 4-week, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. | Nutmeg extract: 37 (32.4) Placebo: 37 (32.4) | Nutmeg extracts: 60.7±11.5 Placebo: 59.7±8.1 | NA | Reduced worst and mean pain scores Improved QOL No statistically significant differences between the groups for all outcome measures | ( |
| Heydari | Topical | Two-arm, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel study | ≥3 months | Decreased mean pain score Improved nerve function Improved physical domain of QOL | ( | ||
| Mahoney | Topical ketamine cream | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, study | Ketamine: 10 (40.0) Placebo: 7 (57.1) | Ketamine: 64.0±9.5 Placebo: 65.4±15.0 | NA | No more effective than placebo | ( |
| ClinicalTrials. govNCT00476151, 2006 | Topical 4% amitriptyline and 2% ketamine | Phase 2, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel group study | Ami/Ket: 114 (57.0) Placebo: 112 (50.9) | Ami/Ket: 56.1±9.4 Placebo: 55.1±11.0 | ≥6 months | Showed a strong trend toward pain reduction in painful diabetic neuropathy | ( |
DNP, diabetic neuropathic pain; QOL, quality of life; NA, not available.