Mohammadian Mehrbod, Morrissey Erin J, Knight Paulina C, Brusaferri Ludovica, Kim Minhae, Efthimiou Nikolaos, Murphy Jennifer P, Alshelh Zeynab, Grmek Grace, Schnieders Jack H, Chane Courtney A, Sandström Angelica, Catana Ciprian, Gilman Jodi M, Locascio Joseph J, Edwards Robert R, Zhang Yi, Napadow Vitaly, Loggia Marco L
Department of Radiology, Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Pain. 2025 Apr 9;166(9):2044-2053. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003543.
Our group has shown that translocator protein (TSPO) levels, a putative marker of neuroinflammation, are increased in the brain and spinal cord of patients with chronic low back pain (cLBP). Whether neuroinflammation might be a therapeutic target for this condition is unknown. In this phase II double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial, we sought to evaluate whether the tetracycline antibiotic minocycline, which is commonly used as a glial inhibitor in preclinical models, has an effect on brain TSPO levels in adults with cLBP. Participants randomly received 100-mg minocycline or placebo, once a day for 2 weeks. The primary outcome was the change (pretreatment vs posttreatment) in thalamic TSPO levels, measured using [11C]PBR28 positron emission tomography signal (standardized uptake value ratio) and analyzed with a mixed effect model. Secondary outcome measures included the change in Brief Pain Inventory, severity subscore. Among 60 enrolled participants, 48 completed the trial. Of these, 25 received minocycline (age [years], mean ± SD: 44.6 ± 16.9; 9 female), and 23 received placebo (49 ± 17.1; 9 female). The mean thalamic positron emission tomography standard uptake value ratio was very stable across visits in both groups, with no significant group-by-time interaction (P = 0.956). Similarly, both groups demonstrated a comparable decrease over time in Brief Pain Inventory severity scores (P = 0.018) and no significant group-by-time interaction (P = 0.329). Our results suggest that minocycline, at the tested regimen, may neither reduce brain TSPO levels nor have clinically meaningful effects on clinical pain in patients with cLBP.
我们的研究小组已经表明,转运蛋白(TSPO)水平,一种假定的神经炎症标志物,在慢性腰痛(cLBP)患者的大脑和脊髓中升高。神经炎症是否可能成为这种疾病的治疗靶点尚不清楚。在这项II期双盲、安慰剂对照、随机临床试验中,我们试图评估四环素抗生素米诺环素(在临床前模型中常用作神经胶质抑制剂)对患有cLBP的成年人脑TSPO水平是否有影响。参与者随机接受100毫克米诺环素或安慰剂,每天一次,持续2周。主要结局是使用[11C]PBR28正电子发射断层扫描信号(标准化摄取值比率)测量并通过混合效应模型分析的丘脑TSPO水平的变化(治疗前与治疗后)。次要结局指标包括简明疼痛量表严重程度子评分的变化。在60名登记参与者中,48名完成了试验。其中,25名接受了米诺环素治疗(年龄[岁],平均值±标准差:44.6±16.9;9名女性),23名接受了安慰剂治疗(49±17.1;9名女性)。两组在各次访视中丘脑正电子发射断层扫描标准化摄取值比率均非常稳定,无显著的组×时间交互作用(P = 0.956)。同样,两组在简明疼痛量表严重程度评分上均随时间呈现出可比的下降(P = 0.018),且无显著的组×时间交互作用(P = 0.329)。我们的结果表明,在所测试的方案下,米诺环素可能既不会降低脑TSPO水平,也不会对cLBP患者的临床疼痛产生具有临床意义的影响。