Pharmacokinetic and neuroimmune pharmacogenetic impacts on slow-release morphine cancer pain control and adverse effects.

Pharmacogenomics J

Discipline of Pharmacology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated whether genetic variations in the opioid neuroimmunopharmacology pathway affect how cancer patients respond to morphine treatment, analyzing data from 506 patients.
  • It found that patients with pain control had lower levels of morphine-3-glucuronide, while those with cognitive dysfunction had higher morphine levels.
  • Certain gene variants were associated with reduced odds of experiencing adverse effects and differing responses to morphine, indicating the importance of both pharmacokinetics and genetics in pain management for cancer patients, despite some limitations in the research.

Article Abstract

The aim was to determine if opioid neuroimmunopharmacology pathway gene polymorphisms alter serum morphine, morphine-3-glucuronide and morphine-6-glucuronide concentration-response relationships in 506 cancer patients receiving controlled-release oral morphine. Morphine-3-glucuronide concentrations (standardised to 11 h post-dose) were higher in patients without pain control (median (interquartile range) 1.2 (0.7-2.3) versus 1.0 (0.5-1.9) μM, P = 0.006), whereas morphine concentrations were higher in patients with cognitive dysfunction (40 (20-81) versus 29 (14-60) nM, P = 0.02). TLR2 rs3804100 variant carriers had reduced odds (adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) 0.42 (0.22-0.82), P = 0.01) of opioid adverse events. IL2 rs2069762 G/G (0.20 (0.06-0.52)), BDNF rs6265 A/A (0.15 (0.02-0.63)) and IL6R rs8192284 carrier (0.55 (0.34-0.90)) genotypes had decreased, and IL6 rs10499563 C/C increased (3.3 (1.2-9.3)), odds of sickness response (P ≤ 0.02). The study has limitations in heterogeneity in doses, sampling times and diagnoses but still suggests that pharmacokinetics and immune genetics co-contribute to morphine pain control and adverse effects in cancer patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11144121PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41397-024-00339-wDOI Listing

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