4.6 Article

Sex and Estrous Cycle Differences in Analgesia and Brain Oxycodone Levels

Journal

MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 12, Pages 6540-6551

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12035-021-02560-1

Keywords

Sex differences; Estrous cycle differences; Analgesia; Brain drug levels; Microdialysis; Oxycodone

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DA043526]
  2. Canada Research Chairs program
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FDN-154294]
  4. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
  5. CAMH Foundation

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Studies have shown that female rats in diestrus have higher oxycodone analgesia and brain oxycodone levels. Sex and estrous cycle impact oxycodone analgesia and brain oxycodone levels, likely through regulation of brain CYP2D oxycodone metabolism.
Sex differences in opioid analgesia occur in rodents and humans, and could be due to differences in drug and metabolite levels. Thus, we investigated the sex and cycle differences in analgesia (nociception) from oxycodone in rats and related these to sex and cycle differences in brain and plasma oxycodone and metabolite levels. Since numerous opioids are CYP2D enzyme substrates and variation in CYP2D alters opioid drug levels and response, we also initiated studies to see if the sex and cycle differences observed might be due to differences in brain CYP2D activity. Across oxycodone doses, females in diestrus had higher analgesia (using tail flick latency) compared to males and females in estrus; we also demonstrated a direct effect of estrous cycle on analgesia within females. Consistent with the analgesia, females in diestrus had highest brain oxycodone levels (assessed using microdialysis) compared to males and females in estrus. Analgesia correlated with brain oxycodone, but not brain oxymorphone or noroxycodone levels, or plasma drug or metabolite levels. Propranolol (a CYP2D mechanism-based inhibitor), versus vehicle pre-treatments, increased brain oxycodone, and decreased brain oxymorphone/oxycodone drug level ratios (an in vivo CYP2D activity phenotype in the brain) in males and females in estrus, but not in females in diestrus. Brain oxymorphone/oxycodone inversely correlated with analgesia. Together, both sex and estrous cycle impact oxycodone analgesia and brain oxycodone levels, likely through regulation of brain CYP2D oxycodone metabolism. As CYP2D6 is expressed in human brain, perhaps similar sex and cycle influences also occur in humans.

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