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Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update

The symptoms of interstitial cystitis (IC)/bladder pain syndrome (BPS) may have multiple causes and involve many contributing factors. Traditional treatments (intravesical instillations) have had a primary focus on the bladder as origin of symptoms without adequately considering the potential influe...

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Autores principales: Andersson, Karl-Erik, Birder, Lori
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Continence Society 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5756823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29298474
http://dx.doi.org/10.5213/inj.1735022.511
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author Andersson, Karl-Erik
Birder, Lori
author_facet Andersson, Karl-Erik
Birder, Lori
author_sort Andersson, Karl-Erik
collection PubMed
description The symptoms of interstitial cystitis (IC)/bladder pain syndrome (BPS) may have multiple causes and involve many contributing factors. Traditional treatments (intravesical instillations) have had a primary focus on the bladder as origin of symptoms without adequately considering the potential influence of other local (pelvic) or systemic factors. Systemic pharmacological treatments have had modest success. A contributing factor to the low efficacy is the lack of phenotyping the patients. Individualized treatment based on is desirable, but further phenotype categorization is needed. There seems to be general agreement that IC is a unique disease and that BPS is a syndrome with multiple pathophysiologies, but this has so far not been not been well reflected in preclinical research with the aim of finding new pharmacological treatments. Current research approaches, including anti-nerve growth factor treatment, anti-tumor necrosis factor-α treatment, activation of SHIP1 (AQX-1125), and P2X3 receptor antagonists, and α(1)-adrenoceptor antagonists are potential systemic treatments, implying that not only the bladder is exposed to the administered drug, which may be beneficial if the IC/BPS is a bladder manifestation of a systemic disease, or negative (adverse effects) if it is a local bladder condition. Local treatment approaches such as the antagonism of Toll-like receptors (which still is only experimental) and intravesical liposomes (with positive proof-of-concept), may have the advantages of a low number of systemic adverse effects, but cannot be expected to have effects on symptoms generated outside the bladder. Assessment of which of the treatment approaches discussed in this review that can be developed into useful therapies requires further studies.
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spelling pubmed-57568232018-01-12 Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update Andersson, Karl-Erik Birder, Lori Int Neurourol J Review Article The symptoms of interstitial cystitis (IC)/bladder pain syndrome (BPS) may have multiple causes and involve many contributing factors. Traditional treatments (intravesical instillations) have had a primary focus on the bladder as origin of symptoms without adequately considering the potential influence of other local (pelvic) or systemic factors. Systemic pharmacological treatments have had modest success. A contributing factor to the low efficacy is the lack of phenotyping the patients. Individualized treatment based on is desirable, but further phenotype categorization is needed. There seems to be general agreement that IC is a unique disease and that BPS is a syndrome with multiple pathophysiologies, but this has so far not been not been well reflected in preclinical research with the aim of finding new pharmacological treatments. Current research approaches, including anti-nerve growth factor treatment, anti-tumor necrosis factor-α treatment, activation of SHIP1 (AQX-1125), and P2X3 receptor antagonists, and α(1)-adrenoceptor antagonists are potential systemic treatments, implying that not only the bladder is exposed to the administered drug, which may be beneficial if the IC/BPS is a bladder manifestation of a systemic disease, or negative (adverse effects) if it is a local bladder condition. Local treatment approaches such as the antagonism of Toll-like receptors (which still is only experimental) and intravesical liposomes (with positive proof-of-concept), may have the advantages of a low number of systemic adverse effects, but cannot be expected to have effects on symptoms generated outside the bladder. Assessment of which of the treatment approaches discussed in this review that can be developed into useful therapies requires further studies. Korean Continence Society 2017-12 2017-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC5756823/ /pubmed/29298474 http://dx.doi.org/10.5213/inj.1735022.511 Text en Copyright © 2017 Korean Continence Society This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Andersson, Karl-Erik
Birder, Lori
Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update
title Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update
title_full Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update
title_fullStr Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update
title_full_unstemmed Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update
title_short Current Pharmacologic Approaches in Painful Bladder Research: An Update
title_sort current pharmacologic approaches in painful bladder research: an update
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5756823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29298474
http://dx.doi.org/10.5213/inj.1735022.511
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