Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy And Safety Of High Concentration Capsaicin Patches In Knee Osteoarthritis In Obese Patients: A Randomized Prospective Double Blind Placebo Controlled Study
To assess the efficacy and safety of high concentration capsaicin patches in pain due to osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee in patients with obesity
Osteoarthritis is one of the leading causes of pain and disability. In France osteoarthritis
of the knee, the most common form of osteoarthritis has been recently estimated to affect 4.7
% of men and 2.5 % of women .
One particularly exposed population to osteoarthritis is represented by obese patients.
Obesity, defined as a body mass index (BMI) above 30 kg/m², is considered to be one of the
most important risk factors for osteoarthritis (OA) in knees. Numerous longitudinal studies
show a strong association between obesity, and radiographic knee OA, e.g. in the Framingham
Study, the Chingford Study, the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, the John Hopkins
Precursors Study, and in longitudinal studies in UK and the Netherlands. Thus, the WHO
initiative on counteracting obesity also accepts OA as a consequence of obesity . Each BMI
increase by 1 kg/m² is associated with a 15% increased risk of OA. A number of recent studies
involving the association between obesity and knee osteoarthritis have since been published.
A large, population-based prospective study (n = 823) conducted by Toivanen et al. with a
follow-up of 22 years found that the risk for knee osteoarthritis was 7 times greater for
people with BMI ≥30 compared to the control of people with BMI <25. A prospective cohort
study of the Norwegian population by Grotle et al. (10) that followed 1,675 patients reported
that BMI >30 was significantly associated with osteoarthritis of the knee, with odds ratio of
2.81, and 95% CI of 1.32-5.96. Lohmander et al. found that in a large cohort study of 27,960
patients from the Swedish population, the relative risk for knee osteoarthritis (fourth
quartile compared to first quartile) was 8.1, with a 95% CI of 5.3-12.4. Finally, a
case-control study from Holliday et al. with 1,042 knee osteoarthritis patients and 1,121
matched controls reported that the adjusted odds ratio for knee osteoarthritis in patients
with BMI >30 was 7.48 with 95% CI of 5.45-10.27.
Pain is one of the major comorbid conditions that may preclude effective weight management in
these patients, particularly with regards to physical activity, since pain increases with
effort and movement. Obese patients generally receive oral analgesics, such as weak opioids
or tramadol, but due to a number of associated comorbidities, they generally do not tolerate,
or have contraindications to, centrally acting analgesics. Furthermore an increasing number
of obese patients are managed by malabsorbtive bariatric surgical procedures, exposing them
at risk for inefficacity by oral analgesics, in regards to the malabsorptive effect.
Therefore alternative therapies, and in particular topical treatments, may be indicated in
these patients as these drugs have less systemic side effects. The use of such treatments in
patients with obesity should contribute to facilitate rehabilitation and hence contribute to
weight loss, which may further help to reduce pain.
One promising topical treatment is represented by capsaicin. Capsaicin is an agonist of the
transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1), a non-selective cation channel. It is well
established that capsaicin applied in high concentration to the skin can cause initial
nociceptor sensitization through its agonistic effects on TRPV1 receptors then subsequently
acts in the skin to attenuate cutaneous hypersensitivity and reduce pain by a process best
described as "defunctionalisation" of nociceptor fibres (e.g. temporary loss of membrane
potential, inability to transport neurotrophic factors leading to altered phenotype, and
reversible retraction of epidermal and dermal nerve fibre terminals). Evidence suggests that
the utility of topical capsaicin may extend beyond painful peripheral neuropathies, and that
this treatment may be particularly relevant in patients with osteoarthritis pain. Thus TRPV1
is mainly expressed by nociceptive neurons in dorsal root and trigeminal ganglia. However,
there is increasing evidence that TRPV1 is also expressed in various cell types including
synovial fibroblasts (SF) from patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis (OA) and thus may
play a role in non-neuronal mechanisms that might modulate nociception in symptomatic
osteoarthritis.
An additional effect of high concentration of capsaicin, which does not involve TRPV1, is a
direct inhibition of mitochondrial respiration. Furthermore, by using the approach of
patch-clamp, capsaicinoids (capsaicin and dihydrocapsaicin) have been shown to reversibly
inhibit the currents of T-type voltage-dependent Ca2+channels, suggesting the effect of
capsaicinoids on pain relief may also be related to the inhibition of T-type Ca2+ channels.
Capsaicin is metabolized rapidly by several cytochrome enzymes present in human liver, but in
vitro studies shows that its metabolism in human skin is quite low. Capsaicin reside at the
site of action (i.e. skin) relatively unchanged, whereas capsaicin which is transdermally
absorbed is rapidly eliminated and does not have any systemic effect.
To date, repeated applications of low dose capsaicin cream at different concentrations
(0.0125 to 0.25 %) have been found moderately effective in OA of the knee or hand, based on
the basis of six double or single blind trials with sample sizes ranging from 14 to 200
patients. However repeated applications of capsaicin cream are difficult on the long term
particularly because of the burning sensation induced by the cream and the necessity to
repeat applications several times per day.
Recently high concentration capsaicin patches (8%) (Qutenza) have been developed for the
treatment of peripheral neuropathic pain. These treatments induce long lasting analgesic
effects in these conditions lasting up to an average of 3 months after a 30 to 60 minutes
application. The burning side effect related to the application of the patch is rapidly
reversible and very few severe side effects have been reported with this procedure.
If the primary cause of chronic musculoskeletal pain lies deep within joints and topical
capsaicin does not provide substantial transdermal delivery, then the apparent efficacy of
topical capsaicin in lower back pain and OA could be postulated to be by CNS modulatory
mechanisms. Another possibility is that alterations in, or sensitization of, cutaneous
nociceptors could be a contributing factor. Such alterations might be driven by unusually
high concentrations of cytokines or growth factors in joints which could either diffuse some
distance away from the primary site of inflammation or promote excitatory phenotypes in
nearby collateral axons. Furthermore there is increasing evidence that TRPV1 expression is
not limited to primary afferent neurons but that the receptor is expressed in various cell
types throughout the body. TRPV1 is present in synovial fibroblasts from symptomatic OA and
RA (rheumatoid arthritis) patients and the receptor can be activated by stimulation with the
vanilloid capsaicin. It is very likely that capsaicin stimulation does not only induce IL-6
production but also results in the release of other signalling molecules that may transfer
the information to other non-neuronal or neuronal cells and thereby contribute to a
modulation of nociception in the inflamed joint.
Based on the mechanisms described above, there are reasons to believe that Qutenza may also
be effective in osteoarthritis pain. To date, there are strictly no data regarding potential
efficacy and safety of this treatment in osteoarthritis pain in obese patients
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