| Literature DB >> 32495188 |
Kasra Amirdelfan1, Jason E Pope2, Joshua Gunn3, Melissa M Hill4, Bradley M Cotten4, John E Beresh5, Douglas Dobecki6, Nathan Miller7, Pankaj Mehta8, George Girardi9, Timothy R Deer10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Chronic pain assessment and post-treatment evaluation continues to be challenging due to a lack of validated, objective tools to measure patient outcomes. Validation of mechanistic pain biomarkers would allow clinicians to objectively identify abnormal biochemistry contributing to painful symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Inflammation; Kynurenine; Micronutrient; Pain
Year: 2020 PMID: 32495188 PMCID: PMC7648807 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-020-00175-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
Component biomarkers of the FPI and clinical interpretation in the context of chronic pain
| Biomarker | Clinical interpretation | Relevance to pain and clinical features | Notes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methylmalonic acid | Elevated levels indicate a vitamin B12 deficiency | Vitamin B12 deficiency leads to nerve damage and degeneration of the spinal cord. Peripheral neuropathy is the most common pain presentation | Deficiency can be precipitated by: Medications which lower stomach acidity (such as proton pump inhibitors, H2 receptor antagonists) Metformin Gastric surgery or resection Vegan or vegetarian diets Exposure to nitrous oxide | [ |
| Xanthurenic acid | Elevated levels indicate a vitamin B6 deficiency | Neuropathy to due to vitamin B6 deficiency starts with numbness, paraesthesias, or burning pain in the feet, which then ascends to affect the legs and hands | Vitamin B6 deficiency can be precipitated by: Use of vitamin B6 antagonists (isoniazid, phenelzine, hydralazine, penicillamine, and carbidopa) Hemodialysis Inflammatory or autoimmune disease | [ |
| Homocysteine | Elevated levels commonly indicate a B-vitamin (B6/B9/B12) deficiency | Elevated homocysteine results from B-vitamin deficiencies. Elevated homocysteine levels cause inflammation by increasing arachidonic acid and the proinflammatory prostaglandin E2 production | Elevated homocysteine levels result from: B-vitamin (B6/B9/B12) deficiencies Use of diuretic medications Chronic alcohol consumption | [ |
| 3-HPMA | Elevated levels indicate increased exposure to acrolein | Acrolein contributes to inflammatory pain sensitivities through its binding and activation of the transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 receptor (TRPA1) in nerve fibers | Increased acrolein exposure can result from: Chronic tobacco use Foods cooked or fried at very high temperatures Use of certain anti-cancer drugs Spinal cord injury | [ |
| Pyroglutamate | Elevated levels indicate glutathione depletion | Glutathione depletion renders nerve cells susceptible to oxidative damage which can lead to neuropathic pain | Glutathione depletion can be precipitated by: Chronic use of acetaminophen Poorly controlled diabetes | [ |
| Ethylmalonate | Elevated levels indicate a carnitine deficiency | Carnitine deficiencies cause muscle aches and fatigue | Carnitine deficiency can be precipitated by: Valproic acid High-fat diets Treatment with acetyl- | [ |
| Hydroxymethylglutarate | Elevated levels indicate a Coenzyme Q10 deficiency | Coenzyme Q10 deficiencies can cause muscle weakness and pain | Coenzyme Q10 deficiency can be precipitated by: Use of statin medications Coenzyme Q10 supplementation ameliorates statin-associated muscle symptoms such as muscle pain and weakness | [ |
| 5-HIAA | Abnormally low levels indicate decreased synthesis/turnover of serotonin | Abnormally low synthesis/turnover of serotonin can heighten pain sensitivity | Abnormally low synthesis/turnover of serotonin can be precipitated by: Chronic inflammation upregulates indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase which redirects dietary tryptophan down the kynurenine pathway and away from serotonin synthesis Insufficient intake of high-quality protein Vitamin B6 deficiency | [ |
| Vanilmandelate | Abnormally low levels indicate decreased synthesis/turnover of norepinephrine | Abnormally low synthesis/turnover of norepinephrine can heighten pain sensitivity | Abnormally low synthesis/turnover of norepinephrine can be precipitate by: Chronic alcohol use Insufficient intake of high-quality protein Adrenal insufficiency | [ |
| Quinolinic acid | Elevated levels indicate cytokine-mediated chronic inflammation | Quinolinic acid is a neuroactive kynurenine pathway (KP) metabolite which serves as a sensitive marker of chronic, systemic inflammation. Upregulation of this pathway has been shown to play a central role in the comorbidity of pain and depression. Quinolinic acid induces its depressive effects through its action on NMDA receptors | Chronic, systemic inflammation can be precipitated by: Autoimmune disease Exposure to LPS from Gram-negative bacteria | [ |
| Kynurenate | Elevated levels indicate cytokine-mediated chronic inflammation | Kynurenate is a neuroactive kynurenine pathway (KP) metabolites which serves as a sensitive marker of chronic, systemic inflammation. Upregulation of this pathway has been shown to play a central role in the comorbidity of pain and depression | Chronic, systemic inflammation can be precipitated by: Autoimmune disease Exposure to LPS from Gram-negative bacteria | [ |
3-HPMA 3-hydroxypropylmercapturic acid, 5-HIAA 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid
Tiers used to categorize FPI scores
| FPI score | Likelihood of detected abnormalities being pain determinants | Minimum number of expected abnormal biomarkers |
|---|---|---|
| 0–19 | Low | 0 |
| 20–49 | Moderate | 1 |
| 50–79 | Moderately high | 2 |
| 80–100 | High | 3 |
Inclusion/exclusion criteria for the ERD2019-02 study
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Men and women between the ages of 21 and 75 | Severe or untreated psychiatric disturbance |
| Long-term use (> 6 months) of an opioid analgesic at a current daily dose of 30 mg morphine equivalents (MME) or greater | Liver and/or kidney disease |
| Currently under the care of a participating investigator | Pregnancy |
| Understands and complies with all sample collection procedures | Use of corticosteroid or another immunosuppressive drug during or 1 month prior to sample collection |
| Diagnosed with bacterial or viral infection during or 3 months prior to the study | |
| Being prescribed anti-cytokine therapies | |
| Use of the following dietary supplements in the previous 3 months: B vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B12); folate or folic acid; magnesium; |
Lamba (λ) conversion table for biomarkers (x)
| X | Lamba ( | Lamba ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| MMA | 1/(log10(x)) | QA | x1 |
| HCYS | x− 0.25 | KYNA | log10(x) |
| XAN | x− 0.01 | HMG | log10(x) |
| PGA | x1 | EMA | x− 0.05 |
| VMA | x− 0.25 | 3-HPMA | x− 0.5 |
| 5-HIA | x0.8 |
Characteristics of patients suffering from chronic pain
| Patient characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Number of subjects | 153 |
| Male (%) | 48 |
| Female (%) | 52 |
| Cigarette smoker (%) | 24.8 |
Data includes patients' characteristics suffering from chronic pain (n = 153) and prescribed long-term opioids (> 6 months prescription) used for multi-biomarker score training
Biomarker validation across patient and healthy cohorts
| Healthy | Pain | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of subjects | 334 | 153 | |||
| Male (%) | 50 | 48 | |||
| Female (%) | 50 | 52 |
Comparison of means (non-parametric t test) and ROC curve of discriminating algorithm (heathy vs. pain). Multivariate analysis (least squares) was used to determine distinguishable power of the multi-biomarker score, FPI. To achieve normal distributions of biomarkers, box-cox transformations (λ, lambda) and outlier analyses (determined by > 2.5 × SD) were applied. Subjects were matched for age and sex to control for collection variation between cohorts. Biomarkers are expressed as normalized to creatinine concentrations (µg/mg) for each urine sample. Data were analyzed with level of significance at α = 0.05
AUROC area under receiver operating characteristic curve, 5-HIA 5-hydroxyindoleacetatic acid, 3-HPMA 3-hydroxypropyl mercapturic acid
Fig. 1ROC curve of FPI. Healthy (n = 334) and pain (n = 153) subjects were matched for sex (female: 50%) and age (avg per group: 55 years old). AUROC area under the receiver operating characteristic
Fig. 2Comparison of means (non-parametric t test) of FPI. Healthy (n = 334) and pain (n = 153) subjects were matched for sex (female: 50%) and age (avg per group: 55 years old). ***P value < 0.0001
Relationship between the FPI score and clinical assessments of chronic pain
| FPI severity (Spearman’s | ||
|---|---|---|
| Limitations due to emotional problems | 0.520 | 0.0011 |
| Emotional well-being | 0.463 | 0.0044 |
| General health | 0.345 | 0.0457 |
| SF-36 score | 0.406 | 0.0141 |
Clinical evaluations were compared between pain patients with moderately high to high FPI severity scores (> 75 FPI) and low FPI severity scores (< 20 FPI)
Fig. 3Comparison of means (non-parametric t test) of FPI severity and SF-36 scores. Clinical evaluations were compared between randomly selected pain patients with moderately high and high FPI severity scores (> 75 FPI; n = 20) and low FPI severity scores (< 20 FPI; n = 20). **P value < 0.001
Fig. 4ROC curve of FPI severity and SF-36 scores. ROC analysis was performed between randomly selected pain patients with moderately high and high FPI severity scores (> 75 FPI; n = 20) and low FPI severity scores (< 20 FPI; n = 20). AUROC area under the receiver operating characteristic curve
Fig. 5Association between SF-36 scores and FPI severity among chronic pain patients. Data is represented as mean ± SEM and was analyzed by linear trend analysis of one-way ANOVA. MOD moderate, M.HIGH moderately high
Biomarker and clinical characteristics of subjects across all four FPI scoring tiers
| Minimum number of expected abnormal biomarkers | Low | Moderate | Moderately high | HIGH | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | ANOVA | Linear trend | |
| Average number of abnormal biomarkers | 0.24 ± 0.44 | 1.84 ± 0.74 | 3.24 ± 0.51 | 4.72 ± 0.46 | ||
| SF-36 Scores | 1255 ± 579 | 1662 ± 644 | 1754 ± 555 | 1806 ± 560 | ||
Grouped, categorical data were analyzed as linear trend analysis of one-way ANOVA
| Chronic pain assessment and post-treatment evaluation continues to be challenging for medical providers due to a lack of validated, objective tools to measure patient outcomes. |
| Validation of mechanistic pain biomarkers would allow clinicians to objectively identify abnormal biochemistry contributing to painful symptoms in patients. |
| The Foundation Pain Index (FPI) is a multi-biomarker assay derived from algorithmic analysis of abnormal urinary metabolites observed in a cross-sectional observational study. |
| FPI scores strongly segregate biomarker profiles of healthy control subjects and chronic pain patients and correlate with worsening clinical assessments of chronic pain. |
| This test provides novel, objective data that evaluates the role of biochemistry in chronic pain, which may pave the way for targeted, non-opioid therapeutic strategies. |