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Researchers Develop Safer Opioid Painkiller

39 points| Someone | 9 years ago |ucsf.edu | reply

19 comments

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[+] 1propionyl|9 years ago|reply
This was the story with heroin, oxymorphone, codeine... Practically every generation was in theory safer and actually turned out to be much worse.
[+] akiselev|9 years ago|reply
Turned out to be much worse based on what evidence? All three of your examples have been in use for over a century and there have been dozens of pain killers invented since then that are much better at targeting specific pain receptors without the addiction.
[+] 1propionyl|9 years ago|reply
I should clarify I'm supposing that by opioid they mean morphine based opioids.
[+] fifteenforty|9 years ago|reply
This is interesting, but doesn't get me too excited. Respiratory depression, whilst a perpetual issue in the the medical use of opioids, isn't necessarily a problem at the lower doses that the evidence suggests actually works. It's a problem at high doses, but those high doses don't provide significant benefits over smaller doses and are associated with hyper-sensitivity to pain and opioid tolerance.

Don't get me wrong though, respiratory depression and arrest is a real thing. I deliberately induce it as part of an anaesthetic every day.

[+] gozur88|9 years ago|reply
Wow, it would be nice if this one pans out. A friend of mine had open heart surgery, and he never once complained about pain in his chest or his leg or the fact that he couldn't push down and couldn't walk far or any of the other stuff that goes along with it.

But the side effects from the opioids were driving him crazy. After a few days he stopped taking them because the pain was easier to deal with.

[+] slantaclaus|9 years ago|reply
This is what Purdue Pharmaceuticals said about Oxycontin
[+] girvo|9 years ago|reply
The headline, yes. But if you read the actual article, it seems it's working with the same endorphin receptors without the dangerous side-effects; further, the article hedges its bets by explaining that this is purely in mice so far, and this drug candidate has a long way to go, but as it's a novel opioid that isn't derived from morphine, there is reason for very cautious optimism.

Numerous other novel opioids that aren't morphine derived have shown that it is possible to come close to the pain relief offered, while mitigating the negative side-effects. This is not impossible, I believe, but it'll be interesting to see whether PZM21 is 'the one'.

[+] Pitarou|9 years ago|reply
Could we now please get a move on and use the same trick to develop new antibiotics?
[+] fuzzfactor|9 years ago|reply
Roger, it's not the opiates, it's the trick:

"An international team of researchers — . . . Their secret? Starting from scratch — with computational techniques that let them explore more than four trillion different chemical interactions."

This was exactly my idea back in the mid-'70's when I thought of one of the ways computer science could be applied to drug development. Of course all we had were mainframes, but so did the drug companies.

Then, my first employment was with a pharmaceutical producer, I got the impression they were actually further away from this compared to starting a whole new drug company from scratch itself.

Until new antibiotics come along, when necessary you might want to investigate older, more well-established germ-killers like colloidal silver. The real thing is hard to beat, but it is outnumbered by quack versions and get-rich-quick schemers.

[+] pashapiro|9 years ago|reply
I wonder if the cost of this research is greater than the cost for lobbyists to legalize medical marijuana.
[+] jcoffland|9 years ago|reply
The problem with medical marijuana is that it doesn't relieve severe pain and it gets you stoned which not everybody wants.
[+] fuzzfactor|9 years ago|reply
Don't sell either effort short, do both.