Mechanism-Based Treatment and Precision Medicine


Introduction

The advancement of pain medicine is driven by the continual search for new and innovative solutions to a wide range of chronic pain conditions that affect more than 50 million Americans. An important approach is to better understand the mechanisms of pain and factors that determine the transition from acute to chronic pain states. By doing so, new and effective mechanism-guided preventive measures and therapeutics may be discovered, developed, and translated to serve the urgent needs of our patients. However, mechanism-guided therapies often cannot achieve the desired therapeutic outcomes for several reasons. First, our understanding of pain development, maintenance, and chronification or resolution is limited, as the cellular and molecular mechanisms of these pain stages in different pain conditions are not fully understood. Second, most complex pain conditions are determined by an interplay of multiple mechanisms, including other comorbidities, psychological factors, and social determinants. Third, the mechanisms of many therapies are complex, often with multiple targets and mechanisms associated with significant off-target side effects. Fourth, mechanism-guided therapies typically do not consider individual variability in genetics, sex, tolerability to treatment, and many developmental and environmental factors. For these reasons, the future of pain therapeutics will be personalized precision medicine, an emerging approach for disease treatment and prevention that considers individual variability in genetics, prior history, environment, and lifestyle. Thus precision pain medicine has great potential to enhance the biopsychosocial modal of patient-centered care. In the biologic sphere, effective mechanism-based treatment depends on proper assessment and accurate diagnosis/differential diagnosis that is based upon the anatomic location/structure, the pathologic nature, the cellular, molecular mechanisms, and genetic predisposition of pain. Patient phenotyping by quantitative sensory test has been shown to identify subgroups that better respond to specific pharmacologic treatments. At the psychosocial levels, clinical outcomes are highly influenced by such psychological factors as catastrophizing, depression, and anxiety, and social factors such as lifestyle, social economic status, and access to care. Often, these psychosocial factors may be predominant in determining patients’ outcomes.

Evidence-based medicine, by definition, is the conscientious, explicit, judicious, and reasonable use of best evidence in decision-making about the care of individual patients. Evidence-based pain therapy integrates clinical experience and patient values with the best available research information. Thus mechanism-guided treatment and precision medicine are the foundation for the development of evidence-based pain therapy and clinical practice guidelines, which consider individual variability and other confounders to inform clinical decision-making between clinicians and patients with the goal to maximize therapeutic benefits and minimize side effects. Given the futuristic perspective of precision pain medicine, it will be discussed in a dedicated part of this chapter (Precision Pain Medicine Section).

A comprehensive review of all mechanism-based therapies in pain medicine is beyond the scope of this chapter. Instead, we will concisely review the commonly used and mechanism-based therapies that include pharmacologic treatments, interventional procedures/surgeries, and physical/cognitive/and behavioral therapies. We will focus on the recent development of promising and innovative new therapies using biologics such as monoclonal antibodies and cell therapies and neuromodulatory approaches such as spinal cord stimulation (SCS). It cannot be overemphasized that all of these treatment modalities have to be guided by proper assessment and accurate diagnosis and tailored to each patient’s needs as part of patient-centered, multi-disciplinary, and integrated care.

Current and Developing Mechanism-Based Treatments

State-of-the-art therapies in pain medicine are used to modulate the transduction, conduction, transmission, and perception of pain sensation through specific molecular, cellular, and neural network (circuitry) targets ( Table 16.1 ). At the molecular level, pain therapies may work by affecting ion channels, receptors, and other critical signaling molecules. At the cellular level, pain treatment may influence the firing rate and firing pattern of neurons and the state of inflammatory and immune cells, including glia, microglia, and macrophages. At the circuitry level, therapies may influence the function and connectivity of ascending pain pathways, interneurons in the spinal cord, descending modulatory pathways from the brainstem to the spinal cord, and various regions of the brain responsible for the sensory and emotional aspects of pain perception, and behavioral reaction and adaptation to pain.

TABLE 16.1
Therapeutic Agents in Clinical Practice
Therapeutic Target/Mechanisms Representative Drugs
µ opioid receptor agonists Opioids: Morphine, Hydrocodone, Hydromorphone, Methadone, Fentanyl, Tramadol, Tapentadol
Cyclooxygenase (Cox-1 and Cox-2) non-selective inhibitors Meloxicam, Ibuprofen, Naproxen
Cox-2 selective inhibitor Celecoxib (NSAIDs)
Voltage-gated sodium channels: non-selective blockers Antiepileptic drugs: Carbamazepine, Oxcarbazepine; Local anesthetics: Lidocaine, Bupivacaine, Ropivacaine
Voltage-gated calcium channels:
Ca V 2.2 blocker
Ziconotide (used intrathecally for cancer and chronic non-cancer pain)
Ca 2+ channel α2δ1 subunit blocker Gabapentinoid: gabapentin, pregabalin (Antiepileptic drugs)
NMDA Receptor antagonist Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic
5HT1B/D agonist Triptans for Migraine
5HT/NE transporter, serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) Duloxetine (Anti-depressants); Tramadol,
Tricyclic anti-depressants: Amitriptyline, Nortriptyline, Desipramine
5HT transporter, serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) Fluoxetine (alleviation of nociceptive pain and attenuation of opioid tolerance and dependence)
Norepinephrine transporter, Norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (NRI) Tapentadol
Adrenergic α2 receptor agonist Tizanidine (muscle relaxant)
5HT2 receptor antagonist Cyclobenzaprine (muscle relaxant)
Synaptosome-associated protein (SNAP-25) Botulinum toxin A
Vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) Botulinum toxin B
CGRP receptor monoclonal antibody Erenumab for migraine headache prevention
CGRP monoclonal antibodies Fremanezumab, Galcanezumab, and Eptinezumab for migraine headache treatment and prevention

Pharmacologic Therapies

Current Treatments

Current pharmacologic therapy involves the use of local anesthetics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), anti-depressants, anti-convulsants, muscle relaxants, and opioids ( Table 16.1 ), among other drugs. These therapies achieve analgesic effects through a wide range of mechanisms. For example, local anesthetics reversibly block pain impulses by blocking voltage-gated sodium channels. Anti-inflammatory drugs selectively or non-selectively inhibit cyclooxygenases (Cox-1 and Cox-2) to reduce inflammation and sensitization of pain. Most muscle relaxants act centrally. They may activate α2-adrenergic receptor (tizanidine), leading to reduction of excitatory amino acid release from spinal interneurons, or to inhibit 5-HT2 receptor (cyclobenzaprine), leading to diminishing serotonergic descending tone in the spinal cord ventral horn. Anti-convulsants block sodium (e.g. carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, topiramate, valproic acid) or calcium channels (gabapentinoids, valproic acid). , Opioids activate μ, delta, or κ opioid receptors to produce analgesia. Anti-depressants, such as serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs, e.g. duloxetine, tramadol, and TCAs), selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs, e.g. Fluoxetine), and selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (NRIs, e.g. tapentadol), activate the descending inhibitory pathways to dampen nociceptive transmission. It is common for one drug to have multiple therapeutic targets or mechanisms. For example, tapentadol acts as a norepinephrine transporter inhibitor and a μ-opioid receptor agonist; Gabapentin primarily works by blocking the a2d1 subunit of voltage-gated Ca 2+ channels, but may also modulate other targets such as transient receptor potential channels and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. In addition, it may also inhibit γ-amino-butyric acid (GABA) release in the locus coeruleus and stimulate noradrenaline-mediated descending inhibition in the spinal cord.

Monoclonal antibodies are antibodies produced by identical immune cells that are clones of a unique parent cell. Given their high selectivity and long half-lives (weeks), monoclonal antibodies are emerging as the main type of pain therapeutic for multiple targets. Monoclonal antibodies antagonizing the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) signaling pathway represent a novel and mechanism-specific approach to the prevention and treatment of migraine headaches, as CGRP plays a critical role in neurogenic inflammation and the pathogenesis of migraine. Monoclonal antibodies against CGRP (fremanezumab, galcanezumab, and eptinezumab) or CGRP receptor (erenumab) , have shown efficacy in preventing or aborting migraine headaches in high-profile controlled trials without safety issues to date ( Table 16.1 ).

Treatments Under Development

It is noteworthy that Oliceridine is recently FDA-approved for short-term use to treat moderate to severe pain in hospitals or other controlled clinical settings. ( Table 16.2 ). However, pharmacologic inhibitors for these new targets for G protein-coupled receptors, ion channels, and enzymes have achieved limited success. For example, pre-clinical studies have indicated an important role of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP) kinase in microglia activation and the pathogenesis of pain. However, most of the p38 inhibitors have failed in clinical trials for different disease conditions either because of poor pharmacokinetic profiles or lack of selectivity. Nerve growth factor (NGF) plays an important role in inflammatory pain and cancer pain, NGF monoclonal antibodies such as Tanezumab, Fulranumab, and Fasinumab are developed for managing chronic pain in humans and in dogs and cats. Anti-NGF treatment alleviated joint pain in patients with osteoarthritis, but also resulted in joint safety events. Further research is needed to determine the clinical importance of these efficacy and adverse event findings. The voltage-gated sodium channel subtype Nav1.7 is one of the best validated targets for human pain. However, the effect of a selective, peripherally restricted Nav1.7 sodium channel blocker PF-05089771 was smaller than that seen with pregabalin.

TABLE 16.2
Therapeutic Targets That Have Been Or Are Being Tested
Therapeutic Target/Mechanisms Representative Agents
TRPV1 antagonists (nociceptor & pain transduction) MK2295, SB705498, GRC6211, AMG517, ABT102, ADZ1386
Na V 1.7 sodium channel inhibitors
(nociceptor excitability & pain conduction)
PF-05089771, CNV1014802, funapide, DSP-2230, Ralfinamide
Ca V 3.2 T-type calcium channel inhibitors (synaptic transmission) TTA-P2; epipregnanolone [(3β,5β)-3-Hydroxypregnan-20-1]
K V 7 potassium channel activator (nociceptor excitability) Retigabine, flupirtine
CCR2 chemokine receptor antagonists
(neuroinflammation)
RS504393, AZD2423, RAP-103
NMDA receptor blockers (synaptic transmission) Nitrous oxide, dextromethorphan
p38 MAP kinase inhibitors
(intracellular signal transduction, microglial activation, neuroinflammation)
Acumapimod (BCT197), Neflamapimod (VX-745), PH-797804, dilmapimod (SB-681323), losmapimod (GW856553X), Talmapimod
NGF monoclonal antibodies
(pain sensitization)
Tanezumab, Fulranumab, Fasinumab
Biased μ-opioid receptor agonist
(pain transmission)
TRV130 (Oliceridine)
k-opiod receptor agonists
(pain transmission)
Pentazocine; JT09 (agonists, peripheral analgesic effects without central side effects)
P2X purinergic receptors antagonist
(pain sensitization)
AF-219 (P2X3 antagonist)
GABA receptors subtype-selective modulator (pain transmission) NS11394 (subtype-selective positive allosteric modulator at GABA A receptors)

Nonpharmacologic Therapies

Interventional Procedures

Interventional procedures employ an array of therapeutic mechanisms. Nerve blocks with local anesthetics, often combined with a corticosteroid, reversibly block nociceptive afferents and reduce irritation/inflammation of the target nerve. Since nerve blocks often only provide short-term therapeutic effects, nerve ablations are sometimes used to provide longer term relief of joint pain (e.g. facet joint, sacroiliac joint, knee, hip, shoulder, and intervertebral disc), neuropathic pain (e.g. trigeminal neuralgia, nerve entrapments), or visceral pain (chronic abdominal or pelvic pain) through radiofrequency denervation, cryoneurolysis, chemoneurolysis, or balloon compression. These procedures provide an irreversible block of nociceptive afferents until nerve regeneration and reinnervation occur.

Surgical Approaches

A wide range of surgical procedures are performed to treat pain by decompressing specific nerves that are compressed or entrapped. Examples include microvascular decompression for trigeminal neuralgia, laminectomy or minimal invasive lumbar decompression for spinal canal stenosis, foraminotomy for foraminal stenosis, and discectomy for intervertebral disc encroachment of the spinal nerve root. These surgeries are performed to mitigate physical compression and/or chemical irritation of the target nerve, improve the blood circulation of the nerves, and relieve pain and other symptoms.

Physical/Cognitive/Behavioral Therapies

The role of physical, cognitive, and behavioral therapies is increasingly recognized in pain management. Although the mechanisms for most of these therapies remain to be elucidated, influential hypotheses or theories have been proposed and frequently cited. Physical therapy, such as exercise, manual therapy, and transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, can be used to target specific changes in peripheral tissues and nociceptors, neuropathic pain signs and symptoms, reduced central inhibition and enhanced central excitability, psychosocial factors, and alterations of the movement system. These five categories of pain mechanisms (nociceptive, central, neuropathic, psychosocial, and movement system) are often cited in physical therapies. Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is based on the belief that thought distortions and maladaptive behaviors play a role in the development and maintenance of psychological disorders and disability, including chronic pain disorders, and that symptoms and associated distress can be reduced by teaching new information-processing skills and coping mechanisms. Clinical trials and clinical practice support the use and efficacy of these treatments in specific patient populations.

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