Sulfasalazine in Decreasing Opioids Requirements in Breast Cancer Patients
Klíčová slova
Abstraktní
Popis
In the United States, approximately one in two men and one in three women will develop cancer. Today, more than 15 million people live with cancer in the United States alone. The direct annual medical cost of cancer is over 86 billion US dollars. The indirect cost, representing loss of wages and productivity, exceeds 130 billion US dollars annually. It is estimated that 90% of all cancer patients report pain. About 63% of patients with advanced stage cancer or with metastasis suffer from pain that is classified as "moderate to severe". The majority of cancer patients suffer from excruciating pain. Even those who survive cancer may still experience pain. Of all cancer survivors, 59% report pain secondary to chemotherapy. Even after patients are cured from their cancer, 33% of these patients will still suffer from severe pain due to their chemotherapy. Inadequate pain management results in 67% of patients with severe pain. Notably, 32% of cancer patients reported a desire for suicide secondary to their pain.
Opioids have been the gold standard to treat cancer pain. Sadly, there are many side effects associated with chronic opioid use. It has been shown in animal models that chronic use of opioids has been associated with paradoxical effects. Rats that have been exposed to chronic opioids developed hyperalgesia, which is an exaggerated response to a painful stimulus and allodynia, which is a painful response to a non-painful stimulus. There have been several mechanisms proposed to explain the paradoxical hyperalgesia phenomena observed. This phenomenon has been recognized in patients inflected with chronic pain and managed with chronic opioid. It has been long observed that patients with chronic pain require gradually increasing doses of opioids. The reasons for this increase in opioid requirement may be complicated. While the progression of the disease may play a significant part in increasing doses of opioid, other factors such as tolerance and opioid induced hyperalgesia cannot be ignored. Tolerance is a characteristic of opioids that is well investigated and results in increasing the doses of opioids to maintain the original analgesic effects. Changing of brain circuitry enables opioids to play a sinister role allowing it to produce pain. Additionally, patients develop physical dependence with their use of opioids. A more significant aspect of chronic use of opioid is the psychological dependence on opioids. While its understandable and necessary for cancer patients to have opioids to control their pain, finding adjuvant pain control therapy may lessen the amount of opioids needed. Using neuropathic pain medications as adjuvants to supplement opioids had mixed results. Therefore, a different agent with different mechanism is action may be needed for better pain control with less opioids.
Cancer cells have high metabolic rate that generate high oxidative stress burden. Cancer cells require glutathione to combat oxidative stress for survival. Cysteine is required for the synthesis of glutathione. Cells acquire cysteine be exchanging intracellular glutamate for the extra cellular cysteine through the Cysteine/Glutamate antiporter. Excreting glutamate results in increased pain through the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA). If an agent can be identified that inhibits the Cysteine/Glutamate antiporter, the cancer cells will have less chances of survival secondary to decreased glutathione that's is needed for protection from oxidative stress. Additionally, decreased amount of the glutamate secreted from the cells may lower the amount of pain produced.
Sulfasalazine is a safe and well-established anti-inflammatory drug with potent inhibitory properties of the cysteine/glutamate antiporter. Utilizing sulfasalazine for cancer patients, in conjunction with opioids, may reduce the amount of opioids needed in two different methods. First, sulfasalazine may decrease the survival rate of cancer cells, thus lowering the mechanical burden of the cancer. Second, sulfasalazine may decrease the amount of glutamate released by cancer cell resulting in less activation of the NMDA receptor.
The investigator proposes a clinical trial to administer sulfasalazine to initially focus on breast cancer patients with pain. The pain may be from the primary tumor or from metastasis. The investigator hypothesis that sulfasalazine will reduce cancer pain, the amount of the opioids needed, and the undesirable side effects associated with high doses of opioid.
Termíny
Poslední ověření: | 08/31/2019 |
První předloženo: | 02/17/2019 |
Odhadovaná registrace vložena: | 02/17/2019 |
První zveřejnění: | 02/19/2019 |
Poslední aktualizace byla odeslána: | 09/23/2019 |
Poslední aktualizace zveřejněna: | 09/24/2019 |
Aktuální datum zahájení studie: | 12/14/2019 |
Odhadované datum dokončení primární: | 07/14/2020 |
Odhadované datum dokončení studie: | 12/30/2020 |
Stav nebo nemoc
Intervence / léčba
Drug: Sulfasalazine
Drug: Placebos
Fáze
Skupiny zbraní
Paže | Intervence / léčba |
---|---|
Placebo Comparator: Placebos Subjects will receive sugar pill. | Drug: Placebos This group will receive supplies for 3 months of sugar pills three times a day for 3 months. Subjects will be asked to take their medications with every meal in addition to their regular pain medications. |
Active Comparator: Sulfasalazine Subjects will receive the active drug. | Drug: Sulfasalazine This group will receive supplies for 3 months of sulfasalazine at an initial dose of 0.5 gram three times a day for a week then at a dose of 1 gram three times a day for the remainder of the 3 months. Subjects will be asked to take their medications with every meal in addition to their regular pain medications. |
Kritéria způsobilosti
Věky způsobilé ke studiu | 18 Years Na 18 Years |
Pohlaví způsobilá ke studiu | Female |
Přijímá zdravé dobrovolníky | Ano |
Kritéria | Inclusion Criteria: - Adult patients capable of understanding and providing consent in English and capable of complying with the outcome used. - Diagnosis of cancer with pain moderate to severe pain on stable doses of opioids - 3-day average numeric pain rating score (NPRS) for pain of at least 4/10 at baseline evaluation. - Patient consents to double blind design of the experiment in a shared decision- making process with the treating physician. - Pain duration of at least 6 weeks or more. - Prognosis greater than 6 months. Exclusion Criteria: - Those receiving remuneration for their pain treatment (e.g., disability, worker's compensation). - Those involved in active litigation relevant to their pain. - Subjects with intestinal or urinary obstruction or at risk of such disorders. - Porphyria - Blood dyscrasias, hepatic or renal disease. - Taking medications that may interact with sulfasalazine. - Taking Lapatinib or Digoxin. - History of hypercalcemia. - Hypersensitivity to sulfasalazine, its metabolites, sulfonamides, or salicylates. - The Subject is incarcerated. - Those unable to read English and complete the assignment in English. - Addictive behavior, severe clinical depression, or psychotic features. - Possible pregnancy or lactation. |
Výsledek
Primární výsledná opatření
1. Overall pain relief. [Twelve weeks]
Měření sekundárních výsledků
1. Decrease opiate dose. [Twelve weeks]