| Literature DB >> 35645327 |
Colleen G Jordan1, Amy L Kennalley1, Alivia L Roberts1, Kaitlyn M Nemes1, Tenzing Dolma1, Brian J Piper1,2.
Abstract
The opioid epidemic is an ongoing public health crisis, and the United States health system is overwhelmed with increasing numbers of opioid-related overdoses. Methocinnamox (MCAM) is a novel mu opioid receptor antagonist with an extended duration of action. MCAM has potential to reduce the burden of the opioid epidemic by being used as an overdose rescue treatment and a long-term treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD). The currently available treatments for OUD include naloxone, naltrexone, and methadone. These treatments have certain limitations, which include short duration of action, patient non-compliance, and diversion. A narrative review was conducted using PubMed and Google Scholar databases covering the history of the opioid epidemic, pain receptors, current OUD treatments and the novel drug MCAM. MCAM could potentially be used as both a rescue and long-term treatment for opioid misuse. This is due to its pseudo-irreversible antagonism of the mu opioid receptor, abnormally long duration of action of nearly two weeks, and the possibility of using kappa or delta opioid receptor agonists for pain management during OUD treatment. MCAM's novel pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties open a new avenue for treating opioid misuse.Entities:
Keywords: addiction; buprenorphine; methadone; methocinnamox; naloxone; naltrexone; opioid use disorder; overdose; receptors; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35645327 PMCID: PMC9149874 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy10030048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Comparison of opioid use disorder and opioid overdose treatment drugs. Table includes naloxone [95,96], naltrexone [97,98], methadone [99,100,101], buprenorphine [102,103], and methocinnamox (MCAM) [19,24,104,105,106,107]. DOA: duration of action, μ: mu, κ: kappa, δ: delta opiate receptor, min: minutes, h: hours.
| Treatment Drug | Method of | Mechanism of Action | Onset of | Duration of | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| naloxone | Intravenous | Reversible μ, κ and δ competitive antagonist | 1–5 min | 1–2 h | Rescue from overdose, wide therapeutic window | Short DOA, community misuse, risk of renarcotization, precipitates withdrawal, drug-drug interactions, surmountable |
| naltrexone | Intravenous | Reversible μ, κ and δ competitive antagonist | 15–30 min | >72 h | Use during pregnancy, extended-release formula | May precipitate withdrawal, patient noncompliance, drug-drug interactions |
| methadone | Intravenous | μ and δ agonist | 30–60 min | 4–8 h, single dose; 22–24 h, continuous dosing | Prevents withdrawal, reduces opioid cravings, pain relief | Patient noncompliance, dependence, misuse and diversion, restricted availability in US, close monitoring of dosage, many drug-drug interactions, ADRs |
| buprenorphine | Intravenous | Partial μ agonist, κ, δ competitive antagonist | 10–30 min | 2–24 h | Prevents withdrawal, use during pregnancy, prevents euphoria and overdose symptoms | Less potent than methadone, patient retention inferior to methadone, may precipitate withdrawal, drug-drug interactions, ADRs |
| MCAM | Intravenous | Pseudo-irreversible μ, not competitive antagonist 2, reversible κ, δ competitive antagonism | 15–45 min | 5 days to 2 weeks | Long DOA, not surmountable, prevents renarcotization, lacks notable drug–drug interactions, antinociceptive concomitant treatment possible | Precipitates withdrawal, not yet tested in humans |
1 Subcutaneous formula is a pellet implant. 2 MOA incompletely understood.
Figure 1Methocinnamox’s chemical structure. Molecular Formula: C30H32N2O4, PubChem CID: 46877713, IUPAC name: (E)-N-(4R,4aS,7aR,12bR)-3-(cyclopropylmethyl)-9-hydroxy-7-oxo-2,4,5,6,7a,13-hexahydro-1H-4,12-methanobenzofuro3,2-eisoquinolin-4a-yl-3-(4-methylphenyl)prop-2-enamide (compound/methocinnamox) [112].