Preliminary results from a phase I study of substance P-saporin in terminal cancer patients with intractable pain.

2014 
191 Background: For 10-15% of cancer patients, pain cannot be controlled using existing therapies (Zech et al., Pain, 63, 65-76, 1995). SP-SAP is the first targeted toxin to undergo phase I testing for pain. SP-SAP (Wiley and Lappi, Neurosci Lett, 230, 97-100, 1997) covalently linkes substance P (SP), a neuromodulator that binds to NK1 receptors on laminae I and X of the dorsal horn, and saporin (SAP), a ribosomal toxin that ablates cells that express NK1 and endocytose the toxin. Intrathecal injections of SP-SAP in rats reduce chemically or thermally induced pain, thermal hyperalgesia, and mechanical allodynia, with no signs of motor, sensory, or behavioral dysfunction (Mantyh et al., Science, 278, 275-9, 1997; Nichols et al., Science, 286, 1558-61, 1999; Suzuki et al., Nature Neurosci, 5, 139-26, 2002; Vierck et al., Neurosci, 199, 223-32, 2003). In canines, intrathecal injections into the lumbar region – 45 mcg for 10-15 kg (Allen et al., Toxicol Sci, 91, 286-98, 2006) or 15 mcg for 8-12 kg (Wiese et a...
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