Danson Sarah, Mulvey Matthew R, Turner Lesley, Horsman Janet, Escott KJane, Coleman Robert E, Ahmedzai Sam H, Bennett Michael I, Andrew David
Academic Unit of Clinical Oncology, Sheffield Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre, Weston Park Hospital, University of Sheffield, UK.
Academic Unit of Palliative Care, Leeds Institute of Health Sciences, University of Leeds, UK.
J Bone Oncol. 2019 Sep 18;19:100261. doi: 10.1016/j.jbo.2019.100261. eCollection 2019 Dec.
Pain is a major symptom of bone metastases from advanced cancer and represents a clinical challenge to treat effectively. Basic neurobiology in preclinical animal models implicates enhanced sensory processing in the central nervous system, acting through -methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptors, as an important mechanism underpinning persistent pain. The non-receptor tyrosine kinase Src is thought to act as a hub for regulating NMDA receptor activity and the orally available Src inhibitor saracatinib has shown promise as a potential analgesic in recent animal studies. Here we tested the efficacy of saracatinib as a novel analgesic in an exploratory phase II randomized controlled trial on cancer patients with painful bone metastases. Twelve patients completed the study, with 6 receiving saracatinib 125 mg/day for 28 days and 6 receiving placebo. Pharmacokinetic measurements confirmed appropriate plasma levels of drug in the saracatinib-treated group and Src inhibition was achieved clinically by a significant reduction in the bone resorption biomarker serum cross-linked C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen. Differences between the saracatinib and placebo groups self-reported pain scores, measured using the short form of the Brief Pain Inventory, were not clinically significant after 4 weeks of treatment. There was also no change in consumption of maintenance analgesia in the saracatinib-treated group and no improvement in Quality-of-Life scores. The data were insufficient to demonstrate saracatinib has efficacy as analgesic, although it may have a role as an anti-bone resorptive agent.
疼痛是晚期癌症骨转移的主要症状,也是有效治疗的临床挑战。临床前动物模型的基础神经生物学表明,通过N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)谷氨酸受体起作用的中枢神经系统感觉处理增强,是持续性疼痛的重要机制。非受体酪氨酸激酶Src被认为是调节NMDA受体活性的枢纽,口服可用的Src抑制剂萨拉卡替尼在最近的动物研究中显示出作为潜在镇痛药的前景。在此,我们在一项针对伴有疼痛性骨转移的癌症患者的探索性II期随机对照试验中测试了萨拉卡替尼作为新型镇痛药的疗效。12名患者完成了研究,其中6名接受萨拉卡替尼125mg/天,持续28天,6名接受安慰剂。药代动力学测量证实萨拉卡替尼治疗组血浆药物水平合适,通过骨吸收生物标志物血清I型胶原交联C末端肽的显著降低在临床上实现了Src抑制。使用简明疼痛问卷简表测量,萨拉卡替尼组和安慰剂组的自我报告疼痛评分在治疗4周后无临床显著差异。萨拉卡替尼治疗组维持镇痛药物的消耗量也没有变化,生活质量评分也没有改善。这些数据不足以证明萨拉卡替尼具有镇痛效果,尽管它可能具有抗骨吸收剂的作用。