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By Short-Circuiting Pain Signals, These Drugs Are Poised To Curb The Silent Epidemic That Affects Tens Of Millions.
On April 29, 1997, the supermarket tabloid the National Examiner ran this headline on its cover: "Miracle Pain Cure: Deadly Snail Venom." The garbled story within contained a kernel of truth. Doctors in fact were injecting a drug derived from the venom of a marine snail into patients suffering from the worst kinds of pain imaginable.
One of the researchers responsible for this unlikely drug, neuroscientist George Miljanich, sits beneath a framed copy of the tabloid cover, which shares wall space above his South San Francisco, CA, desk with more staid covers from the journals Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience and the Journal of Neurocytology, among others.
Miljanich works for Dublin, Ireland-based Elan Pharmaceuticals, and his snail-derived drug is called ziconotide. For the last 50 million years, predatory snails in the Pacific Ocean have been stabbing passing fish and killing them with their venom.
In tiny amounts, though, one component of the venom actually blocks the pain in desperately sick and injured people-at least among the
nearly 2,000 who have tried it to date.
"Ziconotide is about a thousand times more potent than morphine," Miljanich says. "Upwards of a third of these patients experience significant improvement in their quality of life." Ziconotide is not yet approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and because it can cause severe side effects, its future remains uncertain. But its ultimate fate in the marketplace is, in a way, beside the point.
Because of its effectiveness in
halting pain, ziconotide has spawned a new generation of drugs
deliberately designed to block the electrical impulses that generate
pain signals, without affecting other systems in the human body.
These efforts represent an
entirely new way to treat pain, one with such commercial promise that
at least a dozen companies-from small biotech companies to
pharmaceutical powerhouses such as GlaxoSmithKline and Merck-are
investing billions of dollars in an effort to improve on nature by
creating synthetic molecules more potent and safer than ziconotide.
Human trials of some of the
drugs could begin within the year. "The idea here would be a drug that
only takes out the pain," says neuroscientist Allan Basbaum [Univ of
CA, San Francisco]. "And that's on the horizon." The need is pressing.
According to the American Pain Foundation, more than 50 million
Americans suffer persistent pain.
Morphine, first chemically
isolated from the poppy plant 200 years ago, remains the drug of choice
for severe pain. Despite its many side effects, including drowsiness,
interference with breathing, constipation, and the potential for
addiction, "no one has bettered it," says University of Michigan
pharmacologist John Traynor.
Many "new" painkillers are in
fact anything but, and they have problems similar to morphine's.
OxyContin, for instance, is actually a morphine derivative that has
been in use since 1917. The difficulty with all of these older drugs is
that they act throughout the nervous system, not just on pain-sensing
nerves-hence their side effects.
A few more-selective new drugs
do exist, including the cox-2 inhibitors used to treat arthritis pain
(Merck's Vioxx or Pfizer's Celebrex, for example), but for really
severe pain, they might as well be sugar pills.
People with postsurgical pain,
intense cancer pain, traumatic injuries, and severe chronic back pain
must often still resort to morphine and its narcotic cousins for
relief. And sometimes, even morphine is not enough... Narcotics dampen
but do not douse the pain… The new pain drugs target ion channels,
porelike molecules on the surfaces of cells that open and close like
tiny, gated tunnels. Ion channels are present in all cells, perhaps
because the earliest living organisms evolved in salt water, with its
high concentrations of sodium and chloride ions.
Indeed, ion channels that
control cells' intake of sodium and calcium regulate everything from
the secretion of hormones to the beating of the heart. In nerve cells,
when ions pour in through the opened channels, they generate an
electrical spike. In pain-sensing nerve fibers, this spike causes pain.
Acute pain has benefits: it
alerts the body to injury and can prevent additional damage. But most
chronic pain serves no purpose. So if one shuts the gate, the theory
goes, chronic pain disappears.
Now, with the identification of
dozens of ion channels, new knowledge of their biology, and a rapidly
growing arsenal of chemical compounds to block them, the theory appears
to be on the verge of leading to new drugs. The key is several recently
discovered ion channels that seem to be found exclusively on the
specialized nerve fibers that sense pain. "If you can develop drugs to
target them...," Basbaum says. He doesn't need to finish his thought.
Analgesia without side effects: the ultimate answer for pain.
Drugmakers have embraced the idea, and one of their most promising targets is the capsaicin receptor. Capsaicin,
the chemical that makes chili peppers hot, can cause intense pain, as
anyone who's accidentally touched an eye after handling hot peppers
knows. (Paradoxically, capsaicin applied over several hours can
actually relieve pain-for reasons that are hotly debated-and capsaicin
creams are sold over the counter to treat conditions like arthritis.)
In 1997, University of
California, San Francisco, neuro- biologist David Julius isolated the
capsaicin receptor. It turned out to be an ion channel that opens not
only when capsaicin binds to it but also
in response to heat and acidity. When the channel opens, calcium ions
flow in, causing the nerve to fire and sending a pain impulse toward
the spinal cord and brain.
Since the capsaicin receptor is
only found on pain fibers (and, possibly, in the brain), and because it
has the remarkable ability to detect different types of painful
stimuli, blocking it could work beautifully for pain relief.
The capsaicin receptor has
drawn the interest of Novartis, Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck-"Every
major drug company, as far as I can tell," says Julius. "Probably the
biggest market is osteoarthritis,"
says Jim Krause, senior vice president of biology for Neurogen, a
Branford, CT, biotech company working on capsaicin receptor blockers.
Cancer pain is another possibility, since bone metastases
result in acid conditions that might trigger the receptor or similar ion channels.
And neuropathic pain-that is,
pain caused by nerve injury-is yet another tantalizing target.
Diabetes, cancer, AIDS, kidney disease, chronic infections, and even
some prescription drugs cause
neuropathic pain, which is often untreatable.
Though it appears that no company is currently testing a drug based on a capsaicin receptor blocker in humans, Neurogen may be the closest and hopes to start testing its compound in humans within a year.
Blocking the capsaicin receptor
prevents pain neurons from firing in the first place, but ion channels
that help transmit pain signals could also prove good drug targets.
Once a pain receptor like the capsaicin receptor is activated, the
initial electrical spike causes sodium ion channels to open in sequence
down the length of the nerve, conveying the electrical impulse all the
way to the nerve's end.
But this sequential opening
happens throughout the nervous system, not just in nerves that signal
pain. Local anesthetics, in fact, block sodium ion channels, but do so
indiscriminately, thus eliminating all nerve activity. Given orally or
injected into the bloodstream, local anesthetics would cause paralysis
and death.
A dozen sodium ion channels
have been identified. But a second sea creature clued researchers into
a sodium ion channel found only on pain-sensing nerves. Like the marine
snail, the deadly Puffer fish, or blowfish, uses a toxin to kill its
prey; this toxin works by blocking sodium channel\s-with the exception
of the channel unique to pain fibers. In 1996 John Wood [University
College London] and John Hunter [Roche Bioscience] simultaneously
isolated that channel by relying on its unique resistance to the
blowfish toxin.
Target just this sodium
channel, researchers assume, and you take out only pain, leaving other
nerves free to fire away, happily transmitting impulses all the way to
the brain. "It looks like you will get good analgesia in the absence of
side effects," says Phil Birch, chief scientific officer of Ionix
Pharmaceuticals in Cambridge, England.
Ionix, cofounded by Wood, has
found several drug candidates that block the sodium channel and hopes
to try one in humans by 2005. "Because the target is expressed only in
pain-sensing nerves, [we] can develop a selective blocker," Birch says.
"We think it'll have a fantastic profile."
But even more alluring is
neuropathic pain. Even the best available drug only helps about 30
percent of patients with neuropathic pain. Selective sodium channel blockers could be the first effective drugs deliberately designed to treat their condition.
Other basic questions about the
effectiveness of blocking specific ion channels remain unanswered. For
one thing, no one is certain that blocking one type of ion channel will
be enough; other kinds of
channels-there are dozens-might open and cause a spike anyway. "The real question is, will one drug do it?" says Basbaum.
He thinks that ion channel
blockers may work well for specific kinds of pain, but that no single
drug will work for everything. "Is there a magic bullet?" he asks. "The
answer is, it may very well be that [drug] cocktails are the way to
go."
Target: Ion Channels.
Still, ziconotide holds out the tantalizing possibility that a single
drug might be enough. Nerve impulses traverse the body through a vast
system of neurons laid out end to end, not quite touching. The gaps
between neurons are called synapses, and certain calcium ion channels
are essential to conveying impulses across the gaps.
While capsaicin and sodium
channel blockers prevent pain-sensing neurons from firing, ziconotide
keeps the impulse from crossing the synapse by blocking these calcium
channels. So it doesn't matter if the other channels are stuck wide
open, causing the first nerve in a pathway to fire violently and
endlessly.
If the impulse can't cross the
synapse, no pain is felt. The first neuron "is firing as fast as it
can, but it's not telling the next neuron that anything's going on,"
explains Bruce Morimoto, director of drug development for NeuroMed, a
Vancouver, British Columbia, biotech company.
Ziconotide is too toxic and too
hard to deliver ever to be widely used; its side effects include
confusion, memory loss, dizziness, and tremors. It fogs the brain the
same way it stops pain, by preventing neurons from communicating.
But NeuroMed and Ionix are
developing next-generation versions of ziconotide. These drugs can be
taken as pills and-their developers hope-will avoid ziconotide's worst
side effects. The key is to target only nerves that are sending pain
impulses….There is one more cautionary footnote to the tale of the new
pain drugs.
All the approaches, and the
billions of dollars the drug industry has invested in them, teeter on
an untested assumption: that blocking nerve impulses in the body's
periphery, before the signals reach the spinal cord, is the best way to
block pain. This seems self-evident but in fact may be wrong.
In the 17th century, Descartes
postulated that injury generates pain by sending a message via nerves
to the brain, as if pulling at the end of a rope to ring a bell. You
bash your shin, the rope rings the
bell in your brain, and you feel pain. It follows that cutting the
rope-blocking the peripheral nerves-should prevent the pain from ever
reaching the brain.
But it's not that simple. It's
now clear that the sensation of pain doesn't match up consistently with
stimulation of pain-sensing nerves. The same injury can produce intense
pain in some people and
nothing in others, depending on the person's immediate circumstances,
past experiences, and state of mind. Soldiers, for instance, may not
realize they have been shot until a battle is over.
On the other hand, many
amputees suffer "phantom limb" pain, in which, say, a missing hand and
fingers are felt in every detail.
"There is no such thing as a painful sensation; there are only
sensations that get interpreted as pain," says Tito Serafini, a
neuroscientist at the South San Francisco biotech company Renovis.
The brain's role is central.
"Looking at the periphery, simply because we can do it, is going off in
the wrong direction," argues John Loeser, a neurosurgeon at the
University of Washington. "The processing of information in the brain
is probably far more important than what happens in the periphery."
In fact, neuroscientists now
know that pain messages do not flow unchecked from the body to the
brain. Instead, "gates" in the spinal cord alter the level and
intensity of nerve impulses. And impulses
descending from the brain can open and close these pain gates. "Pain is in the brain," Basbaum concedes.
Unfortunately, he says, we have
no idea how to find a drug that will attack pain via the brain, still
the most mysterious organ. "We know the brain is an essential part of
the pain experience," he says, "but we just don't know anything about
circuitry or the chemistry."
Until neuroscientists begin to
figure out how the brain controls pain, blocking ion channels could
prove the best way to find highly potent painkillers with few side
effects. These drugs may not be the last word in analgesia, but if
human tests confirm the drugmakers' theories, they will finally make
morphine and its cousins obsolete.. More than 50 million Americans
suffer persistent, severe pain. Even the best drug now helps only 30
percent of patients with neuropathic pain. [Ken Garber is a freelance
science writer based in Ann Arbor, MI; Technology Review]
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