Abstract

Opiates have a long history of medical use as effective analgesics associated with well-described side effects, including euphoria, respiratory depression, constipation, bradycardia, and histamine release, among others. The search for opiate analogs that retain effective analgesic qualities without detrimental side effects has yielded numerous compounds, including buprenorphine. Early studies of buprenorphine demonstrated analgesic effectiveness with a favorable safety profile, leading to the approval of formulations for use in humans. Since then, advances in receptor theory and molecular cloning of opioid receptors have led to a deeper understanding of buprenorphine pharmacology. More recent studies of receptor affinity and intrinsic activity have shown that buprenorphine is a μ- and κ-opioid receptor agonist, a nociceptin orphanin peptide agonist, and a δ-opioid receptor antagonist. Buprenorphine appears to have a primary spinal analgesic mechanism with complex supraspinal actions. It is considered a full agonist for pain but a partial agonist for other clinical endpoints such as respiratory depression. In feline medicine, buprenorphine is approved as low- and high-concentration injectable solutions, in addition to the most recently introduced long-acting transdermal formulation. Several investigational and compounded formulations have also been evaluated. There are contrasting differentiable features that include pharmacokinetics, onsets- and durations-of-action, routes of administration, and formulation constituents. Available buprenorphine formulations allow clinicians to select a formulation based on the anticipated duration of pain associated with various surgical procedures, and to provide interventions as needed. In light of the newly approved transdermal buprenorphine solution in cats and progress in buprenorphine pharmacology, the objective of this review is to examine the history and pharmacology of buprenorphine relative to full opioid agonists, where appropriate, integrating these insights into advances within feline medicine.

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