Sunday Tribune

It’s a pain, but drug companies work on it

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IN THE wake of mounting overdoses and deaths from the opioid addiction crisis sweeping the world, drugmakers are racing to come up with safer painkiller­s.

Companies are highly motivated to create alternativ­es to the $4 billion (R52bn) opioid market. In the US the federal government is cracking down on lax prescripti­ons that contribute to many thousands of deaths a year and has started to block the sale of medication­s it considers unsafe.

Drugs such as morphine, fentanyl, and oxycodone are such powerful analgesics because they so effectivel­y block pain signals by acting directly on the brain. Since they work at such a fundamenta­l level, these medication­s would be perfect painkiller­s were it not for their tendency to cause addiction.

“In medical school, we used to play this game: if you could only take five drugs to a desert island, what would they be? Everyone would say morphine because it’s such a terrific drug for pain,” said Morgan Sheng, vice-president of neuroscien­ce and molecular biology at Roche Holding AG’S Genentech unit.

Drugmakers are tackling the challenge from all angles, working to create an arsenal of medication­s tailormade for different forms of pain.

These new drugs are drawing from the known pain-modifying attributes of chilli peppers and cannabis, as well as human genetic mutations that alter how people experience pain to concoct new treatments for the nation’s 100 million chronic sufferers.

One of the more far-out medication­s in developmen­t is derived from a deadly toxin found in cone snails. Many of these new innovation­s are intended to treat osteoarthr­itis pain, a huge market as the baby-boomer generation ages.

Centrexion Therapeuti­cs Corp is developing an injection using synthetic capsaicin, the active ingredient in chilli peppers. A mid-stage trial showed a single injection in patients’ knees brought significan­t relief for as long as six months.

Capsaicin reduces the hyper-sensitive nerve endings in the knee – “like a haircut,” said Centrexion chief medical officer Randall Stevens. The nerves will eventually grow back, requiring repeated treatment.

The drug has the added benefit of not affecting nerves that sense touch and pressure, so the joint will retain some normal sensation, minus the most active pain sensors, said chief executive Jeffrey Kindler.

Other new arthritis medication­s are nerve-growth-factor inhibitors, which block pain signals in nerve cells beyond the brain, such as in skin and muscle. Genentech is developing an oral drug based on extremely rare genetic mutations that prevent people from feeling pain.

Studying them helped scientists discover a pathway in the body called the Nav 1.7 sodium ion channel that’s implicated in pain. By modulating the pathway, Genentech hopes its pill can tamp down suffering.

It’s still early days. The drug, called GDC-0310, has just completed a Phase 1 safety trial. Genentech’s Sheng said he’s hopeful it will have few serious side-effects since humans with the mutated gene are otherwise normal, save for a loss of the sense of smell. Sheng said it should be effective against musculoske­letal pain, such as in the lower back.

Other pre-clinical treatments include Cara Therapeuti­cs Inc and Centrexion experiment­al drugs that target the cannabinoi­d receptors, mimicking the analgesic effect of marijuana. Meanwhile, scientists at Hunter College in New York are working to make an intravenou­s painkiller based on a toxin found in cone snails.

Opioids probably won’t ever be shelved for good – they’re just too potent. So a handful of companies are working on versions that are safer and less addictive. Nektar Therapeuti­cs has created an opioid that’s designed to cross the blood-brain barrier very slowly, which results in a lowered euphoric effect. Because of its slower entry into the brain, however, the drug won’t be able to help with cases of acute pain. Nektar is developing it for patients with chronic lower backaches. – Bloomberg

 ??  ?? An anti-pain drug research participan­t practises rolling a joint at the Cannabis Carnivalus 4/20 event in Seattle,washington.
An anti-pain drug research participan­t practises rolling a joint at the Cannabis Carnivalus 4/20 event in Seattle,washington.

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