School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, Institute of Medical Sciences, The University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom.
4D Pharma Research Ltd, Aberdeen, United Kingdom.
Pain. 2019 Dec;160(12):2724-2742. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001670.
About half of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) develop debilitating central neuropathic pain (CNP), with no effective treatments. Thus, effective, safe, and novel therapies are needed urgently. Previously, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) was reported to confer neuroprotection in preclinical SCI models. However, its therapeutic potential on SCI-CNP remains to be elucidated. Here, we demonstrated for the first time that intravenous DHA administrations with 3-day intervals (250 nmol/kg; starting 30 minutes after injury and maintained for 6 weeks) effectively prevented SCI-CNP development in a clinically relevant rat contusion model. SCI-CNP was assessed by a novel sensory profiling approach combining evoked pain measures and pain-related ethologically relevant rodent behaviours (burrowing, thigmotaxis, and place/escape avoidance) to mimic those for measuring human (sensory, affective, cognitive, and spontaneous) pain. Strikingly, already established SCI-CNP could be abolished partially by similar DHA administrations, starting from the beginning of week 4 after injury and maintained for 4 weeks. At spinal (epicenter and L5 dorsal horns) and supraspinal (anterior cingulate cortex) levels, both treatment regimens potently suppressed microglial and astrocyte activation, which underpins SCI-CNP pathogenesis. Spinal microgliosis, a known hallmark associated with neuropathic pain behaviours, was reduced by DHA treatments. Finally, we revealed novel potential roles of peroxisome proliferator-activated and retinoid X receptors and docosahexaenoyl ethanolamide (DHA's metabolite) in mediating DHA's effects on microglial activation. Our findings, coupled with the excellent long-term clinical safety of DHA even in surgical and critically ill patients, suggest that systemic DHA treatment is a translatable, effective, safe, and novel approach for preventing and managing SCI-CNP.
大约一半的脊髓损伤 (SCI) 患者会出现衰弱性中枢神经性疼痛 (CNP),但目前尚无有效的治疗方法。因此,急需开发有效、安全和新颖的治疗方法。先前有研究报道二十二碳六烯酸 (DHA) 在 SCI 动物模型中具有神经保护作用。然而,其在 SCI-CNP 中的治疗潜力仍有待阐明。在这里,我们首次证明,每隔 3 天静脉注射 DHA(250 nmol/kg;在损伤后 30 分钟开始,并持续 6 周)可有效预防临床相关大鼠挫伤模型中 SCI-CNP 的发生。通过结合诱发疼痛测量和与疼痛相关的行为学老鼠行为(挖掘、触回避和位置/逃避回避)的新型感觉分析方法评估 SCI-CNP,以模拟人类(感觉、情感、认知和自发)疼痛的测量方法。令人惊讶的是,从损伤后第 4 周开始并持续 4 周的类似 DHA 给药,可部分消除已建立的 SCI-CNP。在脊髓(损伤中心和 L5 背角)和中枢神经系统(扣带前皮质)水平,两种治疗方案均能强力抑制小胶质细胞和星形胶质细胞的激活,这是 SCI-CNP 发病机制的基础。已知与神经病理性疼痛行为相关的脊髓小胶质细胞增生,被 DHA 治疗所减少。最后,我们揭示了过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体和视黄酸 X 受体以及二十二碳六烯酰乙醇胺(DHA 的代谢物)在介导 DHA 对小胶质细胞激活的作用中的新的潜在作用。我们的研究结果表明,结合 DHA 在手术和危重症患者中即使长期使用也具有良好的临床安全性,提示全身性 DHA 治疗是一种可转化的、有效的、安全的、新颖的方法,可用于预防和治疗 SCI-CNP。