plumbus-nine
Bluelighter
Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a major socioeconomic burden. An ideal OUD pharmacotherapy will mitigate the suffering associated with opioid-withdrawal, inhibit the effects of high efficacy opioids and minimize opioid-cravings, while being safe and accessible to a diverse patient population. Although current OUD pharmacotherapies inhibit the euphoric effects of opioids of abuse, the extent to which they safely alleviate withdrawal and opioid-cravings, corresponds with their intrinsic µ opioid receptor (MOR) efficacy. The medium efficacy MOR agonist: buprenorphine in addition to inhibiting the euphoric effects of opioids of abuse, alleviates withdrawal and opioid-cravings, but its intrinsic MOR-efficacy is sufficient such that its utility is limited by abuse and safety liabilities. In contrast, although the MOR antagonist naltrexone minimizes euphoria and has no abuse liability, it exacerbates suffering associated with withdrawal and opioid-cravings. These observations indicate that a therapeutic with intrinsic MOR activity between the partial agonist (buprenorphine) and the antagonist (naltrexone) would strike a balance between the benefits and liabilities of these two therapeutics. To address this need, we derived RM1490, a MOR-agonist based on a non-morphinan scaffold, which exhibits approximately half the intrinsic MOR efficacy of buprenorphine. In a series of preclinical assays, we compared RM1490 to buprenorphine and naltrexone at doses that achieve therapeutic levels of occupancy of CNS MORs. RM1490 exhibited a behavioral profile consistent with reduced reward, dependence and precipitated withdrawal liabilities. RM1490 was also more effective than buprenorphine at reversing the respiratory depressant effects of fentanyl, and did not suppress respiration when combined with diazepam.
Significance Statement In preclinical our studies, RM1490 has a physiological and behavioral profile suitable for OUD maintenance therapy. (- Source -)
Doesn't sound too pleasurable and they always confuse that naltrexone is actually an inverse agonist but does anybody know the molecular structure of RM1490?