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SHORT COMMUNICATION
Plasma Dynorphin A Concentration Reflects the Degree of Pruritus in Chronic Liver Disease: A
Preliminary Report
Catharina SAGITA MONIAGA 1 , Shiho IWAMOTO 1,2 , Tsuneo KITAMURA 2 , Maki FUJISHIRO 1 , Nobuaki TAKAHASHI 1 , Katsunari
KINA 3 , Hideoki OGAWA 1 , Mitsutoshi TOMINAGA 1 and Kenji TAKAMORI 1 *
1
Institute for Environmental and Gender-Specific Medicine, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-1-1 Tomioka, Urayasu,
Chiba 279-0021, 2 Department of Gastroenterology, and 3 Division of Clinical Laboratory, Juntendo University Urayasu Hospital, Chiba, Japan.
*E-mail: [email protected]
Pruritus is a common comorbid symptom of chronic
liver disease (CLD) and can reduce the quality of life.
The pathogenesis of pruritus itself remains unclear, but
includes the involvement of endogenous opioids (1).
Previous studies have identified 3 major types of opioid
receptors, μ-type (MOR, a receptor for β-endorphins),
κ-type (KOR, a receptor for dynorphins), and δ-type (a
receptor for enkephalins) (2). Activation of μ-opioid re-
ceptors is thought to induce pruritus, whereas activation
of κ-opioid receptors is believed to have a suppressive
effect (1, 3). We previously reported that the κ-opioid
system was downregulated in the epidermis of patients
with atopic dermatitis (AD) and that psoralen-ultraviolet
A (PUVA) therapy downregulated the μ-opioid system and
restored the κ-opioid system, concomitant with a decrease
in visual analogue scale (VAS) score (4). Cholestasis in-
creased plasma opioid levels in, both mice and humans (5,
6). In addition, the opioid antagonists, e.g. naloxone and
naltrexone, have been extensively evaluated as the clinical
treatment for patients with cholestasis-associated pruritus
(7, 8). More recently, nalfurafine hydrochloride, a selective
κ-opioid receptor agonist, was approved in Japan for the
treatment of refractory pruritus in patients with CLD (3,
9). Despite many opioid peptide-opioid receptor treatments
used clinically to alleviate pruritus in CLD, no studies to
date have demonstrated any significant correlation between
endogenous opioid levels and the presence or intensity of
pruritus. This study therefore evaluated the concentrations
of β-endorphin (μ-opioid) and dynorphin A (κ-opioid) and
their correlations with pruritus in CLD patients.
ported no symptoms of pruritus. The 20 CLD patients were divided
into two groups, 13 with and 7 without pruritus. We then examined
the endogenous opioid levels between the controls and CLD
patients with or without pruritus. The CLD patients with pruritus
showed plasma concentrations of β-endorphin and β-endorphin/
dynorphin A ratio, which reflects the balance of endogenous
opioids, to be significantly higher; while dynorphin A levels were
significantly lower compared to the controls (Fig. 1). Importantly,
a comparison of endogenous opioid levels showed that dynorphin
A levels were significantly attenuated and β-endorphin/dynorphin
A ratio significantly increased in CLD patients with pruritus than
without. Notably, these levels were similar in the CLD patients
without pruritus and the control group (Fig. 1b and c).
Moreover, we examined the correlations among β-endorphin,
dynorphin A, β-endorphin/dynorphin A ratio and VAS score. There
was no correlation between β-endorphin level and VAS score (Fig.
2a). Meanwhile, dynorphin A level was negatively correlated and
β-endorphin/dynorphin A ratio was positively correlated with the
VAS score (Fig. 2b and c).
DISCUSSION
The present study showed that dynorphin A level and
β-endorphin /dynorphin A ratio were consecutively at-
tenuated and increased in plasma of CLD patients with
pruritus compared to those without (Fig. 1), suggesting
an imbalance of endogenous opioids in CLD patients with
pruritus. In line with these findings, we discovered that dy-
norphin A concentrations and the β-endorphin/dynorphin A
ratio correlated significantly with the VAS scores in CLD
patients (Fig. 2b and c). These findings suggest that plasma
levels of endogenous opioids, especially dynorphin A, may
objectively reflect the pruritus intensity in CLD patients.
The endogenous opioid system has been shown to play
a role in the mediation of pruritus of central origin (10)
as well as in the periphery (4). Clinical and experimental
MATERIALS AND METHODS ( see Appendix S1 1 )
RESULTS
Clinical observations showed that, although pruritus occurs fre-
quently in patients with CLD, some patients in the CLD group re-
b 40
***
20
15
10
5
0
Control
Pruritus (-)
Pruritus (+)
*
30
c
**
20
10
0
doi: 10.2340/00015555-3139
Acta Derm Venereol 2019; 99: 442–443
Control
Pruritus (-)
https://www.medicaljournals.se/acta/content/abstract/10.2340/00015555-3139
1
25
a
Accepted Feb 5, 2019; E-published Feb 6, 2019
Pruritus (+)
***
2.0
*
1.5
1.0
0.5
0
Control
Pruritus (-)
Pruritus (+)
Fig. 1. Relationships of β-endorphin
and dynorphin A concentrations and
β-endorphin/dynorphin A ratios
with pruritus in chronic liver disease
(CLD) patients. Twenty patients
with CLD were divided into those with
(n = 13) and without (n = 7) pruritus and
the concentrations of β-endorphin (a)
and dynorphin A (b) and β-endorphin/
dynorphin A ratios (c) were determined.
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
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