The present invention refers to sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate, pharmaceutically acceptable salts thereof and pharmaceutical compositions comprising it for epidural use in the treatment of lumbar pain.
Lumbar pain represents one of the most common chronic problems having a remarkable impact in economic and social terms and above all on individual well-being. The reference treatment for lumbar pain is currently represented by infiltration of steroids via the epidural route. Response to epidural steroid injection is best when the pain is of recent onset, acute or chronic relapsed. This treatment, when administered for a long time, can cause various side effects harmful to the patient.
Alternative treatments that can be proposed to the patient with lumbar pain are physical therapy, hydrotherapy, analgesics administration and percutaneous electrical neurostimulation.
In many cases none of these treatments is conclusive, and the patient is forced to undergo surgical treatment of the lumbar rachis. Surgical treatment may cause Failed Back Surgery Syndrome (FBSS), a wording that denotes some possible complications, or better, side effects, linked to disc herniation decompression surgery.
FBSS is a pathology often depending on the onset of a fibrosis with dense cicatricial tissue in the peridural region, developing in the wake of the post-surgical hematoma that originates at the level of the amines and the deep surface of paravertebral muscles. The fibrosis tends to extend at the level of the spinal canal and strongly adheres to the dura mater and the nerve roots, causing ischemic-type lesions and adherences: peridural and periradicular fibrosis represents one of the foremost determinants of FBSS.
FBSS diagnosis implies three key concepts: (1) the patient underwent surgery on the lumbar rachis and did not exhibit an improvement, or developed a worsening of the clinical picture; (2) the patient exhibits a pain refractory to conservative treatment, and can again be referred to surgical treatment (revision surgery) in order to alleviate the symptomatology; (3) often, however, following the new surgical intervention a persistence/ingravescence of pain symptomatology is highlighted.
The occurrence by far most frequent is represented by cicatritial outcomes: as is visible at skin level in the incision site, even where disc material has been removed cicatritial tissue is formed, as an outcome of the surgical act. Such tissue can give no sign of its presence for a variable time, and the patient rightly believes to be healed. Sometimes, even years after surgery, by effect of modifications that onset on the spine this anelastic tissue, which has “frozen” an array of structures, not being able to follow the modifications of the spine, begins to exert a mechanical-type action on the root; the patient again begins to feel the same symptoms and disorders for which he/she had been operated, and is forced to start over, with scarce chances of success, the therapeutic treatments followed prior to surgery.
Therefore, in light of the drawbacks mentioned above, the need to propose novel treatments for the treatment of lumbar pain is highly felt.
Sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate (MESNA or Uromitexan) having formula (I)
Is a thiolic compound carrying out a protective action towards urotoxic (adverse) events (inflammatory-hemorrhagic processes of the bladder mucosa) induced by oxazaphosphorinic antiblastic agents: it has a marked organotropism towards the urinary tract, and, by two types of chemical reactions, inactivates acrolein (a highly urotoxic oxazaphosphorin demolition product) and 4-hydroxy metabolites.
The lytic action of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate on collagen fibers, and a topical application of this compound in the chemical dissection of peridural fibrosis during surgical procedures for lumbar spine revision are known in the literature (Denaro et al. Eur Spine J. 2008).
The Inventors have surprisingly discovered that administration of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate via the epidural route causes a strong reduction of lumbar pain, e.g. in subjects in which lumbar pain is associated to Failed Back Surgery Syndrome.
The epidural administration mode, preferably with injection technique by “low-resistance” and “liquid mandrel” syringe, has innovative and minimally invasive features with respect to intraoperative instillation on the spine, as reported in Denaro et al.
The percutaneous epidural administration route results in the compound exerting its action in situ, and in the lytic action on the fibrous bands, fostering a significant reduction in the painful symptomatology.
Therefore, the invention offers the option of treating patients with lumbar pain, having e.g. a case history of postoperative chronic low back pain, in a minimally invasive way with respect to a further surgical operation, to percutaneous electrical neurostimulation, to pharmacological treatments such as steroid infiltration via the epidural route, to the taking of analgesics, comprising high-dosage opioids, via the transcutaneous, oral, intravenous and intrathecal route.
The non-toxicity and the low cost of the compound represent a further advantage in terms of containment of health care expenses.
A first object of the present invention is sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate for epidural use in the treatment of lumbar pain.
A second object of the present invention is a pharmaceutical composition comprising sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate and one or more carriers and/or diluents and/or excipients for epidural use in the treatment of lumbar pain.
Still further advantages, as well as the features and the modes of use of the present invention will be made evident in the following detailed description of some preferred embodiments thereof, given by way of example and not for imitative purposes.
The present invention refers to sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate for epidural use in the treatment of lumbar pain.
Administration of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate via the epidural route of administration could be carried out by the methods and means known to an expert in the art, e.g. by single peridural infiltration with liquid mandrel (LORS) technique and suitable “low-resistance” syringe connected to the Tuohy needle (e.g.,
Epidural use of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate is intended for the treatment of lumbar pain in any form, e.g. chronic or acute, and associated to any pathology, like, e.g., lumbosciatic pain or crural pain due to spinal disc herniation, tumoral lesions that compress nerves, metabolic or post-radiotherapy radiculopathies.
Preferably, sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate via the epidural route could be used in the therapeutic treatment of failed back surgery syndrome (FBSS). The category of patients suffering from FBSS includes patients that, following surgery for spinal disc, lumbar canal stenosis, degenerative and isthmic spondylolisthesis, did not exhibit an improvement from a clinical standpoint but an exacerbation of painful symptomatology. Pain features are variable, in fact pain may be prominently localized at the axial level (low back), or it may be associated also to a typically radicular involvement (according to a metameric distribution). With regard to FBSS classification, a parameter such as that of time elapsed between surgery and onset of symptoms may be used. The wording “immediate onset” is adopted when pain is immediately present following the intervention or onsets within 2-3 weeks: the causes of this typology of pain are referable to non-removal of disc fragments, incomplete decompression, and erroneous identification of the zone to be operated (level error). Onset is defined as “mid-term” when symptomatology appears between 4 weeks and 6 months from intervention; it will be “late” when onset is had 6 months after intervention.
Object of the present invention are pharmaceutical compositions for epidural use in the therapeutic treatment of Failed Back Surgery Syndrome comprising sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate and one or more carriers and/or diluents and/or excipients.
Epidural use of said compositions is meant for the treatment of lumbar pain in any form, e.g. chronic or acute and associated to any pathology, like e.g. failed back surgery syndrome, lumbosciatic pain or crural pain due to spinal disc herniation, tumoral lesions that compress the nerves, metabolic or post-radiotherapy radiculopathies.
The compositions of the present invention could be formulated with one or more carriers and/or diluents and/or excipients according to known techniques. Such carriers and/or diluents and/or excipients can be selected among those normally known in the state of the art and include, but are not limited to: a) carriers, such as sodium citrate and calcium phosphate, b) diluents, water for injectable preparations, sterile saline solution ,c) excipients, such as sodium edetate. The compositions will preferably be in the form of a solution or suspension. The concentration of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate in the compositions is comprised, e.g., between 1 and 500 mg/ml, preferably between 50 and 100 mg/ml. The dosage of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate administered may vary depending on the patient's general conditions, the nature and seriousness of the pathology or disorder. Dosage should therefore take into account severity of the condition to be treated, and general physical conditions of the specific patient, as is well-known to those skilled in the art. Moreover, evidently said effective amount could, when required, be lowered or increased according to the responses of the treated patient.
Typically, the compositions for intraspinal use could contain an amount of sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate comprised between 50 and 100 mg per dosage unit,
By the term “dosage unit” it is meant the amount of active principle per single epidural administration.
Hereinafter, experiments and examples are reported with the purpose of better illustrating what reported in the present description; such examples are in no way to be considered as a limitation of the preceding description and of the subsequent claims.
11 patients (7 males and 4 females), of ages ranging between 48 and 78 years, and suffering from FBSS, were studied (according to the operative diagram in
As criteria for inclusion in the treatment protocol were considered:
In our sample being examined, three patients were carrying a medullary electrostimulator for antalgic purposes, and 1 patient was carrying an intratecal pump for opioids release; oft-times the presence of such devices is not associated to an improved control of painful symptomatology, and vice versa it was associated to a scarce response, with scarce NRS and ODI values.
Each patient was subjected, on average, to 2 (range comprised between 1 and 4) peridural infiltrations of sodium 2 mercaptoethane sulfonate (
During an outpatient care visit, all patients were subjected to pain evaluation by visuo-analogic scales, via Numeric Rating Scales (NRS), considering its intensity in the sitting (
Moreover, all patients were evaluated by Odom's criteria (Table 1), which on the basis of functional improvement define the result of the procedure carried out as: Excellent (Total relief of pre-procedure symptoms; relief of abnormal findings), Good (Minimal persistence of pre-procedure symptoms; abnormal findings unchanged or improved) Fair (Improvement of pre-procedure symptoms; other signs unchanged or slightly improved), or Poor (Signs and symptoms unchanged or exacerbated).
From data assessment, it emerged that pre-procedure pain (quantified with visuo-analogical scales NRS) was on average 7.0 in a sitting position, 7.36 standing and 6.64 in a horizontal position (
Out of 11 patients, Odom's criteria (Table 1) demonstrated “Good” results in 7 patients (63.6%), and “Fair” results in 4 patients (36.4%). No “Excellent” results were detected, but on the other hand in this category of patients they were not expected a priori. However, it should be stressed that there was no “Poor” result, i.e. no result with unchanged signs and symptoms.
Table 1: Variation of Odom's criteria following the procedure: on 11 patients with FBSS, all perceived an improvement of the lumbar pain symptomatology; 7 of them with a minimal persistence of pre-procedure symptoms and 4 with symptom improvement. At the same time, after the procedure no patient exhibited unchanged or exacerbated symptoms.
Denaro et al. Eur Spine J (2008) 17:1752-1756 Effectiveness of a mucolythic agent as a local adjuvant in revision lumbar spine surgery.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
RM2010A000554 | Oct 2010 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2011/054529 | 10/13/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/13/2012 |