(Press-News.org) Deliberately inflicting carefully controlled painful stimuli on human volunteers and seeing how well specific drugs reduce the feeling of pain can be an effective way of testing new drugs. So conclude two researchers who reviewed the available literature on these types of tests in a paper published in the British Journal of Pharmacology.
Pain is important. It acts as an alarm mechanism, warning us that something is about to cause physical damage. It could be triggered by something physical like a cut or bruise, or a temperature driven stimulus such as extreme heat or cold. It could be caused internally by injuries where nerves get trapped. Pain can also become a long-term sensation that lasts long after the damage has occurred. In this case it is referred to as 'chronic' pain, and this can be particularly hard to treat.
The need to tackle pain is huge. A fifth of Europeans suffer from daily pain requiring treatment, with the proportion increasing in people over 70 years old. But pain control is still often insufficient or unsatisfactory because the available drugs fail to provide adequate relief or produce major side effects. Pain has therefore remained one of the major healthcare problems generating estimated socio-economic costs of $560-635 billion/year in the USA alone.
Finding new drugs is complicated because you can't measure pain directly. In animal models you have to watch animals as they respond to stimuli, and in human trials you have to get individuals to report how they feel. On top of this, the body has a number of different ways of detecting pain- generating stimuli, and each mechanism is likely to respond to a different set of pain-killing drugs.
Based in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, Bruno Georg Oertel and Jörn Lötsch started out with a theory. "We thought that if a pain-relieving drug was effective in a particular experimental pain model and also in a specific type of clinical pain, then the experimental model should be predictive for the particular clinical setting," says Lötsch, who works in the Institute of Clinical Pharmacology at the Goethe-University.
They found that overall, human experimental pain models were able to predict how well a drug worked in patients better than previously realised. "Not using these pain models in drug development seems to be unjustified – in fact they should be used routinely in drug development programmes," says Oertel, who works in the Fraunhofer Project Group for Translational Medicine and Pharmacology (TMP), an initiative supported by the Hessian Excellence Initiative ("LOEWE") that runs at the junction between pharmacological research in academia and in the pharmaceutical industry.
The process isn't simple though as not every model can predict every clinical setting. "However, by analysing the way that drugs work in experimental and clinical settings, we identified that different sets of experimental pain models, rather than single models, may be best suited to provide cost-effective yet predictive studies in analgesic drug development," says Lötsch.
"It is difficult and unusual to undertake truly translational research in pharmacology. Here, Jörn Lötsch and Bruno G. Oertel have focused on experiments on humans to bridge the gap between animal research and clinical pharmacology. The review examines how well clinical analgesia is predicted by human experimental pain models, with a view to guiding model selection in phase I studies. The authors identify important disparities between drug effects on experimental and clinical pain. This will help inform thinking on the refinement of human and animal models of pain, ultimately helping the pharmaceutical industry bridge the translational gap in the pain field," says Editor-in-Chief of the British Journal of Pharmacology, Professor Ian McGrath.
More work is needed before this approach is fully ready to use, but the researchers believe this could lead to a more cost effective approach that can help scientists gain valuable information about the ways new drugs are working.
### END
Testing pain killers on humans could save money and speed the arrival of new drugs
2012-11-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New, improved mouse model of human Alzheimer's may enable drug discovery
2012-11-08
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have developed a transgenic mouse that carries a human gene known to increase risk of Alzheimer's 15-fold. This new mouse mimics the genetics of the human disease more closely than any of the dozen existing mouse models and may prove more useful in the development of candidate drugs to prevent or treat the disease.
The new mouse model provides new evidence for the earliest cause of Alzheimer's, researchers report in a study to be published in the December issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry ...
MicroRNAs in plants: Regulation of the regulator
2012-11-08
This press release is available in German.
MicroRNAs are essential regulators of the genetic program in multicellular organisms. Because of their potent effects, the production of these small regulators has itself to be tightly controlled. That is the key finding of a new study performed by Tübingen scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology. They identified a new component that modulates the production of micro RNAs in thale cress, Arabidopsis thaliana, by the removal of phosphate residues from a micro RNA-biogenesis enzyme. This can be as ...
Examining Debt in Florida
2012-11-08
Florida residents know firsthand how devastating this most recent recession has been. While the economy is showing some positive signs, many Floridians are still not seeing these benefits. With unemployment remaining high, and home values struggling to rebound, many individuals throughout the state are experiencing debt problems.
In fact, the debt that some residents are experiencing is actually much higher than the national average. A recent study by Credit Karma, a consumer website, examined the debt of South Floridians to learn more about the extent of debt within ...
New Florida Drug Scheduling Laws Target Synthetics
2012-11-08
Synthetic drugs such as bath salts, K2, spice, incense and potpourri have been gaining popularity in recent years. Authorities have responded by cracking down on the production and sale of such substances. On March 23, 2012, Florida Gov. Rick Scott signed H.B. 1175 into law, greatly expanding the number of controlled substances under state law. Local governments have also enacted bans of the sale of synthetic drugs. Some say that the laws do not go far enough, but others are highly critical of the laws.
New Substances Made Illegal
The new law adds 90 substances to ...
Filing Pennsylvania Workplace Discrimination Complaints Just Got Easier
2012-11-08
The federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) recently revealed several modifications to the process of submitting workplace discrimination complaints. The revamped process is designed to be more user-friendly, flexible and efficient than the former method. The more efficient process will make all aspects of a complaint easier, including everything from filing to processing and from determinations to appeals.
How does the process work now?
Under the current system, an EEOC complaint begins when an employee or applicant asserts discrimination and contacts ...
Bank of America Withdraws Lawsuit Against Tennessee Bankruptcy Trustee
2012-11-08
In a move that implied it was out of its depth, Bank of America has dropped its lawsuit against a Tennessee Chapter 13 bankruptcy trustee. The bank had claimed the trustee was improperly dispersing money when administering Chapter 13 bankruptcy payments.
To understand the significance of Bank of America's lawsuit withdrawal, consumers must first understand the role of a bankruptcy trustee and how Tennessee handles foreclosures.
Role of the Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Trustee & the Tennessee Foreclosure Process
At heart of Bank of America's lawsuit was the responsibility ...
Timelines for Seeking Relief for DePuy Hip Replacement Injuries
2012-11-08
As our population ages, and people are active into later years the demand for joint replacement surgeries has increased. Medical device manufacturers have sought to find ways to extend the lives of various implants, such as hip and knee replacements.
In the mid-2000s, DePuy, a division of Johnson & Johnson, marketed and sold a hip replacement system that claimed to outlast other models. The new system used metal components rather than plastic. In the United States, 37,000 patients received the DePuy ASR Hip Resurfacing System or the ASR Acetabular System.
Unfortunately, ...
Helpful Tips for Financial Stability after a Divorce
2012-11-08
Minnesota residents who are going through a divorce know what a painful experience it is. The early stages of a divorce come with a variety of emotions.
Anger, loss, shock, confusion and panic are common feelings during a divorce. It is often an emotional rollercoaster with individuals feeling up one minute and down the next.
Dividing marital property is one of the most difficult steps of a divorce. Because the process is so emotionally charged, an individual may feel they may be more deserving of some assets than their former spouse may. It is important to not only ...
Distracted Driving: A Serious Problem in New York
2012-11-08
Did you know that according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 15 people die per day in the United States in car accidents that involve distracted driving? Moreover, another 1,200 people are injured on a daily basis.
Distracted driving is a national problem. "Distracted driving" is defined as any activity that diverts a motorist's attention from the task of driving. Unfortunately, far too many people engage in this dangerous habit.
Activities that make driving hazardous include the following:
- Using a cellphone or smartphone ...
Can Workers' Comp Support an Illinois Retaliatory Discharge Claim?
2012-11-08
When fired from a position there are many questions regarding what caused the drastic action. Deciphering what prompted the management decision is difficult especially when it is sudden. When the termination coincides with a workplace injury or the filing of a workers' compensation claim it might be retaliatory.
Recently, a United States District Court in Illinois confirmed that employees are able to make it past the initial proceedings of a civil lawsuit for retaliatory discharges if they can prove that their terminations were significantly motivated by their workers' ...