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Experimental Therapy
May 'Abolish' Arthritis Pain
Early-stage research has found that a new gene therapy can nearly
eliminate arthritis pain, and significantly reduce long-term damage
to the affected joints, according to a study published today in
the journal Arthritis and Rheumatism.
Nearly everyone aged 65 or older suffers from the pain, swelling
and permanent joint damage of osteoarthritis. The most common
form of arthritis, it develops over time following initial joint
injuries or just as a result of aging. In the current study, researchers
found that one injection of a newly designed gene therapy relieved
100 percent of osteoarthritic pain in the study model. In addition,
researchers were surprised to find that the therapy also brought
about a nearly 35 percent reduction in permanent structural to
joints caused by round and after round of osteoarthritic inflammation.
To date, treatment of arthritis is dominated by drug treatments
like non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs, COX-2 inhibitors
and acetominophen. Morphine and its derivatives are still in common
use as well, but can depress breathing and lead to addiction.
Taken together, current treatments deliver inconsistent results
and new approaches are needed, researcher said. Gene therapy has
been attempted in the past, but older, invasive techniques required
that therapeutic genes be injected directly into nerve cells.
Strong pain relief resulted, but in some cases the injections
caused nerve damage.
"Our publication represents the first proof that gene therapy
can work in a way that is clinically applicable," said Stephanos
Kyrkanides, D.D.S., Ph.D., associate professor of Dentistry at
the University of Rochester Medical Center. "This therapy can
simply be injected anywhere in an injured joint, and the treatment
will find the nerve endings," said Kyrkanides, whose work on genetics
in dentistry led to broader applications. The common ground between
arthritis and dentistry: a common site of arthritic pain is the
jaw joint.
Study Details
Proteins called receptors are built into the outer surfaces of
human cells, enabling them react to the nutrients, toxins and
hormones around them. Each receptor is designed to react with
a specific signaling molecule, which docks into the receptor like
a ship coming into port. The docking changes the shape of the
dock to set off chain reactions inside the cell, enabling it to
respond to the signal. On nerve cells for instance, certain receptors
are shaped to accept naturally occurring painkillers called opioids,
which when they dock, prevent the sending of pain messages along
nerve pathways.
In the current study, researchers used gene therapy to increase
by about one thousand times the number of opioid receptors expressed
on the surfaces of nerve cells that carry pain messages back and
forth between an osteoarthritic jaw joint and the spinal cord.
Thus, nerve cells involved in pain transmission, with so many
more receptors on their surfaces, became drastically more responsive
to the naturally occurring painkiller, researchers found.
Gene therapy inserts tailor-made genes into cells that can, for
instance, direct cells to build more of a needed protein. To deliver
the genes into cells, researchers use harmless viruses called
vectors, which have evolved to invade human cells and insert their
DNA. In designing the new therapy, Kyrkanides' team chose to
work first with vectors based on feline immunodeficiency virus
(FIV), a lentivirus that attacks the immune system of cats. It
resembles HIV in humans, but is incapable of causing human infection.
Despite the strong results, however, the team will seek to deliver
the same gene therapy with a different vector in the next phase
of experiments. Kyrkanides is partnering with researchers at the
National Institute on Drug Abuse, part of the National Institutes
of Health, to see whether the same therapeutic gene can be delivered
instead by an adeno-associated vector (AAV). AAVs have already
been approved as safe for experimental gene therapy by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration, eliminating a tremendous regulatory
hurdle. If successful, this next study will provide the proof
of principle needed for the team to apply for phase I human clinical
trials, perhaps within 18 months, Kyrkanides said. Early results,
while not yet published, suggest that one serotype of the AAV
vector they are working with will provide results comparable to
FIV.
Beyond the current study, Kyrkanides' work has contributed
to the emerging theory that pain is not a symptom of osteoarthritis,
but is instead part of the disease. According to this new paradigm,
pain is composed of nerve messages that over time cause permanent
chemical changes in the pathways they travel along, making them
more sensitive to pain and encouraging inflammation. This two-way
"crosstalk" may mean that arthritis in one joint can spread, through
the central nervous system (CNS), to other joints. Worse yet,
joint arthritis may export inflammation to the brain, where it
plays a role in neurological conditions (e.g. Alzheimer's disease,
dementia and multiple sclerosis).
While the just published study involved a technique that delivers
gene therapy by injection at the joint, other promising approaches
may involve interrupting crosstalk in the brain instead. Based
on that promise, the Medical Center is in the process of founding
a private biotech company to develop the technology. It would
search for new drugs that interfere with key inflammatory receptors
on sensory nerve cells within the CNS.
Joining Kyrkanides in the publication from the University of
Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry were co-authors J.
Edward Puzas, Ph.D., Donald & Mary Clark Professor of Orthopaedics,
M. Kerry O'Banion, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of Neurobiology
and Anatomy and Ross Tallents, D.D.S., professor of Dentistry
and director of the Orofacial Pain Program within the University
of Rochester's Eastman Dental Center. Student contributors were
Paolo Fiorentino, Yanjun Gan, Yu-Ching Lai and Solomon Shaftel.
Jennie Miller was involved as Kyrkanides' technical associate.
Maria Piancino, of the University of Torino, Italy, was also an
author based on an alliance between the two institutions. The
study was funded in part by the National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial Research.
"Near future applications of the work may include amplifying
the body's response to morphine, drastically reducing the amount
needed for powerful pain relief," Tallents said. "A little further
out, the new idea that peripheral inflammatory diseases like arthritis
can lead to brain inflammation may provide an entirely new way
to treat inflammatory neurological conditions that affect millions."
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