Summary
August 2007, Vol. 16, No. 8, Pages 1277-1283 , DOI 10.1517/13543784.16.8.1277

Oxytrex®: an oxycodone and ultra-low-dose naltrexone formulation

Lynn R Webster
Medical Director, Lifetree Clinical Research and Pain Clinic, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA +1 801 261 4988; +1 801 269 9427;
Author for correspondence



Oxytrex® (Pain Therapeutics, Inc.) is an oral opioid that combines a therapeutic amount of oxycodone with an ultra-low dose of the antagonist naltrexone. Animal data indicate that this combination minimizes the development of physical dependence and analgesic tolerance while prolonging analgesia. Oxytrex is in late-stage clinical development by Pain Therapeutics for the treatment of moderate-to-severe chronic pain. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of the oxycodone/naltrexone combination, three clinical studies have been conducted, one in healthy volunteers and the other two in patients with chronic pain. The putative mechanism of ultra-low-dose naltrexone is to prevent an alteration in G-protein coupling by opioid receptors that is associated with opioid tolerance and dependence. Opioid agonists are initially inhibitory but become excitatory through constant opioid receptor activity. The agonist/antagonist combination of Oxytrex may reduce the conversion from an inhibitory to an excitatory receptor, thereby decreasing the development of tolerance and physical dependence.

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Forward Links to Citing Articles

Francesco Leri. (2008) Co-administration of opioid agonists and antagonists in addiction and pain medicine. Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy 9:8, 1387-1396
Online publication date: 1-Jun-2008.
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Author:
Lynn R Webster
Keywords:
analgesia
chronic pain
naltrexone
opioids
oxycodone
physical dependence
tolerance
ultra-low-dose antagonist