Abstract 1478P
Background
We have recently exploring biomarkers that could help physicians in selecting the appropriate opioid for individual patients with cancer pain. Recently, we identified, by screening subjects for 74 pain-related single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), a SNP of CCL11 (rs17809012) as one such biomarker that was significantly associated with the analgesic effect of morphine.
Methods
In the current study, we measured the plasma concentrations of several chemokines/cytokines in pre-treatment plasma samples obtained from a total of 138 patients enrolled in our clinical study who had been randomized to a morphine group (n=70) or oxycodone group (n=68). A genotypic analysis was also carried out for several SNPs of the IL-16, the only gene that was positively screened in the plasma analysis. We then used multiple linear regression models to assess whether both of the SNPs of CCL11 and of IL-16 could be combined to accurately predict which opioid might be the most suitable to provide pain relief in patients with cancer.
Results
We identified one cytokine, IL-16, whose plasma concentrations showed a clear bias between patients with cancer pain who responded well and responded poorly to oxycodone. We also confirmed that a SNP of the IL-16 gene (rs4778889) as being significantly associated with the analgesic effect of oxycodone. We then found that the SNPs of CCL11 (rs17809012) and IL-16 (rs4778889) could be used in combination for the opioid prediction. Morphine tended to provide superior analgesic effect over oxycodone in patients with the rs4778889 TT genotype and the rs17809012 AG/GG genotype (n=45), while a trend towards a better analgesic effect of oxycodone was observed in patients with other genotype combinations of the SNPs (n=93) (P=0.0012 for the interaction).
Conclusions
Our results suggest that the IL-16 rs4778889 and CCL11 rs17809012 SNPs could serve as a potential dual-biomarker combination for personalized analgesic therapy in patients with cancer pain.
Clinical trial identification
UMIN000015579.
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
The Health Labor Sciences Research Grant and the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1584P - Association of travel burden (TB) with colorectal cancer (CRC) outcomes in resource-limited settings (RLS)
Presenter: Saquib Banday
Session: Poster session 10
1585P - Performance status restrictions in clinical trials leading to US food and drug administration (FDA) drug approval: A cross-sectional study of a decade (2014-2023)
Presenter: Giovanni Maria Iannantuono
Session: Poster session 10
1586P - Current status of breast cancer: A comparative analysis between developed and developing countries
Presenter: Ana Isabel Martin Quesada
Session: Poster session 10
1587P - As seen through Hollywood’s lens: Cancer in movies, 2010-2020
Presenter: David Benjamin
Session: Poster session 10
1588P - Interventions to improve Herpes Zoster (HZ) vaccination rate among cancer outpatients receiving systemic treatments: A single-center real-world experience
Presenter: Sara Di Bella
Session: Poster session 10
1589P - Ramping up phase I trial recruitment: Defining potential barriers and disparities
Presenter: Burak Aktas
Session: Poster session 10
1590P - Prevalence and impact on survival of presentation to the emergency room of cancer patients: A retrospective study on real-life data
Presenter: Sonia Priou
Session: Poster session 10
1591P - Development and economic trends in new anticancer therapies licensed in the UK from 2020 to 2024
Presenter: Geetin Majhail
Session: Poster session 10
1592P - Awareness and interest of oncology professionals in sex and gender differences in cancer risk and outcome: Analysis of an ESMO Gender Medicine Task Force survey
Presenter: Berna C. Özdemir
Session: Poster session 10
1593P - Factors associated with multiple general practitioner consultations before cancer diagnosis in adolescents and young adults: A cohort study in Australia
Presenter: Jeremy Lewin
Session: Poster session 10