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PHARMARCOLOGICAL FUNCTIONAL MRI FOR NEUROPATHIC PAIN: EVALUATING ANALGESIC EFFICACY . Neuropathic pain. “Pain caused by a lesion or disease of the somatosensory nervous system” IASP 2011
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PHARMARCOLOGICAL FUNCTIONAL MRI FOR NEUROPATHIC PAIN: EVALUATING ANALGESIC EFFICACY
Neuropathic pain • “Pain caused by a lesion or disease of the somatosensory nervous system” IASP 2011 • Peripheral neuropathy common postsurgically, in polyneuropathies, as complications of HIV, diabetes, stroke, MS and other sources of neural damage • Key symptom is persistent pain hypersensitivity leading to spontaneous pain, hyperalgesia and allodynia • Peripheral and central sensitisation are the two mechanisms of post-injury pain hypersensitivity
Study rationale • Pre clinical efficacy of analgesics does not always translate as efficacy in patients. • Capsaicin induced hyperalgesia (via central sensitisation) as a surrogate model of neuropathic pain • Neuropathic pain features present with topical capsaicin: • Spontaneous pain; Mechanical hyperalgesia; Dynamic mechanical Allodynia • Animal and human data supports the specific importance of descending brainstem activity in the maintenance of spinal excitability • In healthy human, midbrain activity • is a specific marker of CS induced by capsaicin • Induced by capsaicin has been shown to be reduced by gabapentin
Hypothesis • Gabapentin is effective in attenuating capsaicin induced hyperalgesia while ibuprofen is not • Drug modulation by Gabapentin can be picked up at an earlier stage in a small cohort using fMRI than is manifest psychophysically
Method • 24 healthy subjects (11 male) • 3 way cross over study; double blind; drug visit order randomised • Using • Gabapentin 1200mg (effective in neuropathic pain) • Ibuprofen 600mg (ineffective in neuropathic pain) • Placebo • Topical capsaicin 1% cream (applied on 4x4 cm2 area on lower leg) • Functional scans while eliciting mechanical hyperalgesia (>3cm from site of application)
Scanning with intermittent sensory testing Study drug/placebo Capsaicin application ~30 min ~ 50 min ~60 mins Blood sampling at the end Sensory testing before scanning Brief medical screening & Urine test Study paradigm M A M A M A fMRI ~60 mins M: Mood scale A: State anxiety O: Ongoing pain M A O O O O O Other scans Tactile Punctate 150 160 170 time (mins) after drug 180 6s stimuli x15 VAS pain and unpleasantness 1s stimuli x18; 512 mN VAS intensity after each poke (0-100) VAS unpleasantness
Analysis • Psychophysics • SPSS • Group ANOVA for ongoing pain • Paired t-tests for evoked pain & mood/anxiety • Functional scans • Automated analysis tools (FMRIB Software Library) • Group activation means • Paired t-test contrasts
Mood/Sedation scores * * Sedation score (/10) * p <0.05 n=24 • Gabapentin induced an increase in the mental sedation score when compared to ibuprofen (p=0.02) and placebo (p= 0.03) • But not in physical sedation or any other psychological parameters.
Ongoing pain * * VAS * * * p <0.05 n=24 time (mins) in scanner • 3x5 ANOVA (visits v timepoints) • Main effect of drug on ongoing pain • [Gb v Ib]: corr p=0.01 • [Gb v Pl]: corr p=0.46 • Main effect of time, significant at timepoints 3 & 4 • No interaction effects
Allodynia 20/24 subjects demonstrated dynamic mechanical allodynia (pain and/or unpleasantness) to the brush stimulus after capsaicin on screening VAS n=20
Secondary punctate hyperalgesia ** VAS ** p <0.01 n=24 • Gabapentin causes significant fall in punctate intensity when compared with Placebobut not when compared with Ibuprofen • There is no difference in punctate unpleasantness between the compounds
Brain response to mechanical hyperalgesia 6.9 Mean Activation Map Placebo Z=2.3 L R R L R R L L Lee et al, J Neuroscience 2008 Contrast Placebo v Ibuprofen Pl>Ib: Ib>Pl: L R R L n=24, Mixed effects, Z=2.3 p<0.05
Gabapentin effect on cortical activation Ibuprofen > Gabapentin Ib>Gb: Gb>Ib: 3.9 Pl>Gb: Gb>Pl: Z=2.3 Placebo > Gabapentin n=24, Mixed effects, Z=2.3 p<0.05
Gabapentin effect on brainstem activation Midbrain field of view Brainstem atlas R L Lee et al, J Neuroscience 2008 Region of interest Analysis n=24, Mixed Effects, Z=2.3, p<0.05 Placebo > Gabapentin Ibuprofen > Gabapentin Nucleus Cuneiformis Midbrain reticular formation
Conclusions • In a model of central sensitisation, gabapentin causes decreased subject-reported secondary punctate hyperalgesia than placebo, but not when compared to ibuprofen • Gabapentin significantly decreases brain activity to secondary mechanical hyperalgesia in the midbrain (nucleus cuneiformis) when compared to ibuprofen or placebo
Some implications for future work • fMRI may be more sensitive than subjective reports for evaluating drug efficacy • Gabapentin may provide its early analgesic action by modulating activity in the brainstem descending pain modulatory pathway • Gabapentin may be effective in prophylactic treatment of neuropathic pain by inhibiting development of central sensitisation
Acknowledgments Professor Irene Tracey DrVishvaraniWanigasekera Stuart Wilson Dr Michael Lee Oxford Pain Imaging Neuroscience Group
Gabapentin effect on development of hyperalgesia ** * • Gabapentin causes significant fall in pain intensity delta (post-pre capsaicin) when compared to Placebo and Ib (p=0.017) • There is no difference in the delta of poke unpleasantness between the compounds
Mean functional maps- DMA 7.1 Placebo Z=2.3 6.7 Ibuprofen Z=2.3 6.1 Gabapentin Z=2.3
Psychophysics- Expectation of pain relief No overall effect of visit on pain expectation or confidence
Mood/Anxiety in scanner Tranquility/Sociability Sedation
Ongoing pain over progressive visits DMA over progressive visits Post capsaicin punctate Δ magnitude Post – Pre capsaicin