Designing a new drug for chronic pain

24 Aug 2012

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Scientists at the University of Liverpool and the Royal Liverpool University Hospital have been awarded £1.4 million to design a new drug for the treatment of chronic pain.

The project funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC), addresses the long-standing and urgent need for effective therapies for chronic pain which affects around 20 per cent of adults in Europe and the US, and more than eight million adult patients in the UK alone.

Medication currently available to treat the condition is effective in only around 40 per cent of sufferers and even these patients often struggle to maintain the balance between adequate pain relief and the adverse effects of current therapies.

Targeting the glycerine receptor

The research team is examining compounds which target the glycine receptor, one of the principal inhibitory neuronal receptors in the central nervous system and crucial in the sensation of chronic pain. Through medicinal chemistry, computational methods and experimental testing, scientists successfully identified novel compounds which could be used for the treatment of chronic pain without unwanted sedative effects.

Professor Martin Leuwer, from the University's department of molecular and clinical pharmacology in the Institute of Translational Medicine, says, ''This is an exciting project that expands our drug discovery portfolio into a new therapeutic area with a huge unmet medical need.  Our collaborative team of medicinal chemists, molecular modellers and neurobiologists have made significant advances in this area and this funding provides us with the opportunity to drive the project forward towards an entirely new class of drug for the treatment of chronic pain conditions. Our ultimate aim is to allow chronic pain patients to regain a dramatically improved quality of life.

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