A new study from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators has found, for the first time, evidence of neuroinflammation in key regions of the brains of patients with chronic pain. By showing that levels of an inflammation-linked protein are elevated in regions known to be involved in the transmission of pain, the study published online in the journal Brain paves the way for the exploration of potential new treatment strategies and identifies a possible way around one of the most frustrating limitations in the study and treatment of chronic pain - the lack of an objective way to measure the presence or intensity of pain.
"Finding increased levels of the translocator protein in regions like the thalamus - the brain's sensory gateway for pain and other stimuli - is important, since we know that this protein is highly expressed in microglia and astrocytes, the immune cells of the central nervous system, when they are activated in response to some pathologic event," says Marco Loggia, PhD, of the MGH-based Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, lead author of the report. Demonstrating glial activation in chronic pain suggests that these cells may be a therapeutic target, and the consistency with which we found glial activation in chronic pain patients suggests that our results may be an important step towards developing biomarkers for pain conditions."
While numerous studies have clearly associated glial activation with persistent pain in animal models, none have previously documented glial activation in the brain of humans with chronic pain. The current study initially enrolled 19 patients with chronic lower back pain and 25 healthy control participants. In a subset of 10 patients and 9 pain-free controls - carefully selected from the initial larger group based on sex, age and genetic characteristics - brain imaging studies were conducted with one of the Martinos Center's integrated PET/MR scanners using a new radiopharmaceutical that binds to the translocator protein (TSPO). Loggia and colleagues found that the levels of the protein in the thalamus and other brain regions were significantly higher in patients than in controls. The PET signal increases were so remarkably consistent across participants, Loggia notes, that it was possible to spot which were the patients and which were the controls just by looking at the individual images prior to detailed statistical analysis of the data.
Another interesting finding was that among patient participants, who had been asked to report their current levels of pain during the imaging session, those with the highest levels of TSPO had reported lower levels of pain. Loggia explains, "While upregulation of TSPO is a marker of glial activation, which is an inflammatory state, animal studies have suggested that the protein actually limits the magnitude of glial response after its initiation and promotes the return to a pain-free, pre-injury status. This means that what we are imaging may be the process of glial cells trying to 'calm down' after being activated by the pain. Those participants with less pain-related upregulation of TSPO may have a more exaggerated neuroinflammatory response that ultimately leads to more inflammation and pain. While larger studies would be needed to further support this interpretation, this evidence suggests that drugs called TSPO agonists, which intensify the action of TSPO, may benefit pain patients by helping to limit glial activation."
An assistant professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School, Loggia notes that the ability to image glial activation could identify patients for whom the drugs targeting the process would be most appropriate. Future studies should investigate whether the same glial activation patterns are seen in patients with other forms of chronic pain or whether particular "glial signatures" may differentiate specific syndromes or pathologic mechanisms.
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Additional co-authors of the Brain paper include senior author Jacob Hooker, PhD, and Bruce Rosen, MD, PhD, of the Martinos Center. Support for the study includes grants from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Center for Advancing Translational Science and the National Center for Research Resources.
Massachusetts General Hospital, founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with an annual research budget of more than $785 million and major research centers in HIV/AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine.
Journal
Brain