Abstract

The role of endogenous opioid systems (endogenous opioids and opioid receptors) in human cancer was explored using an opioid antagonist paradigm and neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-MC) transplanted into nude mice. Mice inoculated with 2.5 × 106 neuroblastoma cells received daily injections of either 0.1 or 10 mg/kg naltrexone (=0.1 and 10 NTX groups) which blocked the opioid receptor for 6–8 hr/day or the entire 24 hr/day, respectively, or sterile water. The latency for appearance of a measurable tumor (5 mm diameter) in the 0.1 NTX group was 27% longer than controls (11 days), and the first death in this group occurred 33% later than controls (day 27). Mice inoculated with tumor cells in the 10 NTX group had an acceleration (18%) in the latency of tumor appearance and, 2 weeks after cell inoculation, 70% of the mice in this group had tumors, in contrast to 10% of the controls. At the termination of the experiment (day 45), only 33% of the 10 NTX group were alive, in contrast to 90% of the controls. Receptor binding assays using DAGO, DADLE, or EKC revealed specific saturable binding only for DADLE and EKC. NTX administration resulted in a 148–186% increase in density for both binding sites, but no changes in binding affinity. Measures of opioid levels showed that tumor tissue levels of both β-endorphin and methionine-enkephalin were elevated 2.5 to 6.5 fold from control values in both NTX groups, whereas plasma β-endorphin was subnormal by 4 to 6 fold. These results indicate that endogenous opioid systems regulate human neurooncogenesis, with opioids being active inhibitors of growth. Opioid antagonists up-regulate receptors and increase tissue levels of endogenous opioids and, under conditions in which the opioid antagonist is short-acting (e.g., 0.1 NTX), can have an exaggerated antitumor effect during the interval when the antagonist is no longer present.

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