• Eur J Pain · Mar 2019

    The analgesic efficacy of morphine varies with rat strain and experimental pain model; implications for target validation efforts in pain drug discovery.

    • Sara Hestehave, Klas S P Abelson, Tina Brønnum Pedersen, and Gordon Munro.
    • Department of Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
    • Eur J Pain. 2019 Mar 1; 23 (3): 539-554.

    BackgroundTranslating efficacy of analgesic drugs from animal models to humans remains challenging. Reasons are multifaceted, but lack of sufficiently rigorous preclinical study design criteria and phenotypically relevant models may be partly responsible. To begin to address this fundamental issue, we assessed the analgesic efficacy of morphine in three inbred rat strains (selected based on stress reactivity and affective/pain phenotypes), and outbred Sprague Dawley (SD) rats supplied from two vendors.MethodsSensitivity to morphine (0.3-6.0 mg/kg, s.c.) was evaluated in the hot plate test of acute thermal nociception, the Complete Freund's Adjuvant (CFA) model of inflammatory-induced mechanical hyperalgesia, and in a locomotor motility assay in male rats from the following strains; Lewis (LEW), Fischer (F344), Wistar Kyoto (WKY), and SD's from Envigo and Charles River.ResultsF344 and SD rats were similarly sensitive to morphine in hot plate and CFA-induced inflammatory hyperalgesia (Minimum Effective Dose (MED) = 3.0 mg/kg). WKY rats developed a less robust mechanical hypersensitivity after CFA injection, and were less sensitive to morphine in both pain tests (MED = 6.0 mg/kg). LEW rats were completely insensitive to morphine in the hot plate test, in contrast to the reversal of CFA-induced hyperalgesia (MED = 3.0 mg/kg). All strains exhibited a dose-dependent reduction in locomotor activity at 3.0-6.0 mg/kg.ConclusionSensory phenotyping in response to acute thermal and inflammatory-induced pain, and sensitivity to morphine in various inbred and outbred rat strains indicates that different pathophysiological mechanisms are engaged after injury. This could have profound implications for translating preclinical drug discovery efforts into pain patients.SignificanceThe choice of rat strain used in preclinical pain research can profoundly affect the outcome of experiments in relation to (a) nociceptive threshold responses, and (b) efficacy to analgesic treatment, in assays of acute and tonic inflammatory nociceptive pain.© 2018 The Authors. European Journal of Pain published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Pain Federation -EFIC ®.

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