Bridging the translational gap: adenosine as a modulator of neuropathic pain in preclinical models and humans

Scand J Pain. 2023 Dec 11;24(1). doi: 10.1515/sjpain-2023-0048. eCollection 2024 Jan 1.

Abstract

Objectives: This review aims to analyse the published data on preclinical and human experimental and clinical adenosine modulation for pain management. We summarise the translatability of the adenosine pathway for further drug development and aim to reveal subgroups of pain patients that could benefit from targeting the pathway.

Content: Chronic pain patients suffer from inadequate treatment options and drug development is generally impaired by the low translatability of preclinical pain models. Therefore, validating the predictability of drug targets is of high importance. Modulation of the endogenous neurotransmitter adenosine gained significant traction in the early 2000s but the drug development efforts were later abandoned. With the emergence of new drug modalities, there is a renewed interest in adenosine modulation in pain management. In both preclinical, human experimental and clinical research, enhancing adenosine signalling through the adenosine receptors, has shown therapeutic promise. A special focus has been on the A1 and A3 receptors both of which have shown great promise and predictive validity in neuropathic pain conditions.

Summary: Adenosine modulation shows predictive validity across preclinical, human experimental and clinical investigations. The most compelling evidence is in the field of neuropathic pain, where adenosine has been found to alleviate hyperexcitability and has the potential to be disease-modifying.

Outlook: Adenosine modulation show therapeutic potential in neuropathic pain if selective and safe drugs can be developed. New drug modalities such as RNA therapeutics and cell therapies may provide new options.

Keywords: adenosine; animal models; human studies; neuropathic pain; translation.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adenosine / therapeutic use
  • Chronic Pain* / drug therapy
  • Humans
  • Neuralgia* / drug therapy
  • Neuralgia* / metabolism
  • Pain Management

Substances

  • Adenosine