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Methylnaltrexone for the treatment of opioid-induced constipation in the setting of palliative or hospice care, is significantly more effective than placebo (1). However, in both the randomized and the open-label phase of the multi center trial showing this favorable outcome, the drug produced rescue-free laxation in only about half of the patients (2). There may be several reasons for this result, since constipation in palliative care patients often has multiple simultaneously occurring causes.
Assuming that constipation of the non-responders is still opioid-induced, one of the possible reasons for not responding to methylnaltrexone could be that central actions of opioids contribute to constipation by reducing motility of the intestines through direct actions in the spinal dorsal horn (2). However, as methylnaltrexone is a µ-receptor antagonist and not all opioids are solely µ-receptor agonists another reason may well be that successful laxation is determined by the receptor-profile of the specific opioid the patient is using.
Opioids do not only influence bowel functioning, but also immune system functioning and angiogenesis. Methylnaltrexone possibly antagonizes these changes, therefore this study will also investigate the influence of methylnaltrexone on immunologic and angiogenic parameters.
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Inclusion criteria
Age ≥ 18 years
Receiving palliative care
Life expectancy ≥ 2 weeks
Able to give informed consent
Receiving opioid treatment with either morphine sulphate, oxycodone or fentanyl
Opioid treatment, both
Has diagnosis of constipation, defined as either
Constipation is defined as opioid induced, determined by investigator
On stable laxative regimen for ≥ 3 days before the first dose of methylnaltrexone. This is defined as at least one type of laxative in an adequate dosing regimen, (e.g. macrogol 2 packets daily, magnesium(hydr)oxide 500 mg three times daily, bisacodyl 10 mg daily or sennoside A+B 10 ml daily) or at least two types of laxatives in a suboptimal dose with patient characteristics hampering optimal treatment.
If the subject is a woman with presumed child bearing potential; negative urine pregnancy test at screening
Surgically sterile or agrees to use a medically acceptable method of birth control or practice sexual abstinence for the duration of the methylnaltrexone treatment and the following 15 days. ~
Exclusion criteria
Additional exclusion criteria for the immunologic and angiogenic analysis part of the study:
7 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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