Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Goethe - University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology IME, Project Group Translational Medicine and Pharmacology TMP, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Eur J Pain. 2018 Mar;22(3):471-484. doi: 10.1002/ejp.1148. Epub 2017 Nov 21.
Cannabinoids have a long record of recreational and medical use and become increasingly approved for pain therapy. This development is based on preclinical and human experimental research summarized in this review. Cannabinoid CB receptors are widely expressed throughout the nociceptive system. Their activation by endogenous or exogenous cannabinoids modulates the release of neurotransmitters. This is reflected in antinociceptive effects of cannabinoids in preclinical models of inflammatory, cancer and neuropathic pain, and by nociceptive hypersensitivity of cannabinoid receptor-deficient mice. Cannabis-based medications available for humans mainly comprise Δ -tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), cannabidiol (CBD) and nabilone. During the last 10 years, six controlled studies assessing analgesic effects of cannabinoid-based drugs in human experimental settings were reported. An effect on nociceptive processing could be translated to the human setting in functional magnetic resonance imaging studies that pointed at a reduced connectivity within the pain matrix of the brain. However, cannabinoid-based drugs heterogeneously influenced the perception of experimentally induced pain including a reduction in only the affective but not the sensory perception of pain, only moderate analgesic effects, or occasional hyperalgesic effects. This extends to the clinical setting. While controlled studies showed a lack of robust analgesic effects, cannabis was nearly always associated with analgesia in open-label or retrospective reports, possibly indicating an effect on well-being or mood, rather than on sensory pain. Thus, while preclinical evidence supports cannabinoid-based analgesics, human evidence presently provides only reluctant support for a broad clinical use of cannabinoid-based medications in pain therapy.
Cannabinoids consistently produced antinociceptive effects in preclinical models, whereas they heterogeneously influenced the perception of experimentally induced pain in humans and did not provide robust clinical analgesia, which jeopardizes the translation of preclinical research on cannabinoid-mediated antinociception into the human setting.
大麻素在娱乐和医疗用途方面有着悠久的历史,并越来越被批准用于疼痛治疗。这一发展基于对大麻素 CB 受体的研究,这些受体广泛存在于疼痛系统中。它们的激活可以调节神经递质的释放。这反映在大麻素在炎症、癌症和神经病理性疼痛的临床前模型中的抗伤害作用,以及在大麻素受体缺陷小鼠的伤害感受过敏中。目前可供人类使用的大麻素药物主要包括 Δ -四氢大麻酚(THC)、大麻二酚(CBD)和纳布酮。在过去的 10 年中,有六项评估大麻素类药物在人类实验环境中镇痛效果的对照研究报告。功能磁共振成像研究表明,在大脑疼痛矩阵中,连接性降低,这表明在疼痛处理方面存在影响。然而,大麻素类药物对实验性疼痛的感知有不同的影响,包括仅减轻疼痛的情感感知而不减轻疼痛的感觉感知、仅有中度镇痛效果或偶尔出现痛觉过敏效应。这也适用于临床环境。虽然对照研究表明没有明显的镇痛效果,但在开放标签或回顾性报告中,大麻素类药物几乎总是与镇痛相关,这可能表明其对幸福感或情绪的影响,而不是对感觉疼痛的影响。因此,虽然临床前证据支持大麻素类镇痛药,但目前人类证据仅勉强支持在疼痛治疗中广泛使用大麻素类药物。
大麻素在临床前模型中一致产生抗伤害作用,而在人类中对实验性诱导疼痛的感知则表现出异质性,且不能提供明显的临床镇痛效果,这使大麻素介导的抗伤害作用的临床前研究向人体研究的转化受到了威胁。