Opioid induced constipation treated with methylnaltrexone is found to prolong the survival of cancer patients by mu receptor role in cancer progression.
Opioid painkillers and their mu receptors may involve in cancer progression and could be a target for treatments. The study was conducted by Dr Filip Janku, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,TX and Dr Jonathan Moss, University of Chicago, IL, USA with his colleagues.// The study was published in the journal Annals of Oncology and was presented at the World Congress of Anaesthesiologists in Hong Kong this year.
‘Overall survival of advanced cancer patients is now improved by methylnaltrexone (MNTX) by having a direct effect on cancer progression.’
Methylnaltrexone (MNTX) is approved in the USA and more than 50 other countries for treatment of opioid induced constipation (OIC). MNTX works by binding to the mu opioid receptor (MOR) in periphery, thereby blocking opioid drugs from binding to that same receptor. It does not cross into the brain, preserving centrally mediated pain relief while reversing the constipation caused by peripheral MORs in the gut. By acting in this way, MNTX is termed a 'peripherally acting mu opioid receptor antagonist'.In this study, the authors pooled data from two placebo controlled randomised clinical trials of MNTX given by subcutaneous injection. In these trials, 229 patients with advanced cancer, treated with opioids for pain relief, and suffering OIC despite laxative treatment were randomised to MNTX or placebo. These patients were analyzed for overall survival (OS) in an unplanned post-trial analysis called a 'post-hoc' analysis. MNTX or placebo were given subcutaneously during the double blind phase of these studies, which was followed by an open label phase in which around half of patients originally on placebo switched to MNTX treatment.
Treatment with MNTX resulted in median OS of 76 days compared to 56 days in those given placebo (statistically significant); when looking specifically at responders to MNTX treatment (those able to defecate after treatment), these survived a median of 118 days compared to 55 days for non-responders (also statistically significant).
The authors say that the direct effect of MNTX on cancer progression is the most likely reason for increased survival, because neither treatment nor response to MNTX led to longer survival in 134 seriously ill non-cancer patients enrolled in the same trials. If the drug showed an overall survival benefit largely due to its effects on the gastrointestinal system, then then all patients would expected to benefit, not just the cancer patients.
They add: "Our results show that treatment with MNTX, and even more so response to MNTX are associated with increased overall survival in advanced cancer patients, which supports our earlier preclinical hypothesis that the mu receptor can play a role in cancer progression. Targeting this receptor with MNTX warrants further investigation in cancer therapy." This human study is consistent with more than a decade of molecular, cellular and animal studies by Dr Moss' team at the University of Chicago and other teams elsewhere.
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However they conclude: "Our findings should be interpreted as preliminary, hypothesis generating, and not enough at this stage to suggest changes to clinical practice, where pain control remains an important issue. Prospective studies to confirm the role of MNTX in advanced cancer patients are warranted to confirm clinical relevance of our findings."
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Source-Eurekalert