Awardee OrganizationFRED HUTCHINSON CANCER RESEARCH CENTER
Description
Abstract Text
Our long-term goal is to develop means of improving the quality of
epidural opioid analgesia for patients in pain following surgery, trauma
or cancer and its treatment. This research is designed to identify
molecular characteristics that determine the balance between diffusion of
opioids and other drugs across the meninges and drug uptake by the
epidural venous plexus. The specific aims of this consortium project are
to 1) determine which meningeal tissue - dura, arachnoid, or pia mater -
is the principal barrier to diffusion of opioids, 2) identify
physicochemical factors that influence meningeal permeability of drugs,
3) apply physicochemical information to prediction of meningeal
permeability of opioids and alpha2-adrenergic agonists, 4) develop
methods for modifying epidural analgesic availability to promote their
meningeal diffusion, 5) determine the route (cisternal/venous) and
kinetics of redistribution of epidurally administered drugs to systemic
and supraspinal sites as a function of: molecular weight, lipid partition
coefficients and solubility modifying agents, and 6) correlate the time
course of redistribution of drug from the epidural space with the effects
on spinal (analgesia) and supraspinally mediated responses (ventilatory
response to C02 elevation). To address these issues, we will conduct two
series of experiments in parallel at FHCRC and UCSD: 1) in vitro
diffusion studies using freshly harvested meningeal tissue to determine
the feasibility of predicting meningeal permeability from physicochemical
properties of analgesic drugs and in vivo studies using a chronically
catheterized epidural dog model to identify the routes and extent of
redistribution of epidural opioids by monitoring drug concentration over
time in lumbar and cisternal cerebrospinal fluid and systemic
circulation. Both components of this project will also evaluate the
utility of using physical and chemical means to control the rate of
release of opioids in the epidural space for improving the spinal
selectivity of drug action. These studies will permit us to define the
characteristics of spinally administered agents which should be sought in
the further development of this important clinical tool to minimize side
effects and optimize the therapeutic advantages.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01DA007313-02
Publications
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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