1. Innate Immune and Neuronal Genetic Markers Are Highly Predictive of Postoperative Pain and Morphine Patient-Controlled Analgesia Requirements in Indian but Not Chinese or Malay Hysterectomy Patients
- Author
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Daniel T. Barratt, Alex Tiong Heng Sia, Ene-Choo Tan, and Andrew A. Somogyi
- Subjects
Genetic Markers ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Receptors, Opioid, mu ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Catechol O-Methyltransferase ,Hysterectomy ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic variability ,Pain, Postoperative ,Morphine ,Patient-controlled analgesia ,business.industry ,Malaysia ,Analgesia, Patient-Controlled ,General Medicine ,Immunity, Innate ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Opioid ,TLR4 ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug ,rs4680 - Abstract
Objective Pain severity and opioid requirements in the postoperative period show substantial and clinically significant inter-patient variation due mainly to factors such as age, surgery type, and duration. Genetic factors have not been adequately assessed except for the neuronal OPRM1 rs1799971 and COMT rs4680, whereas the contribution of innate immune signaling pathway genetics has seldom been investigated. Setting Hospital surgical ward. Subjects Women (107 Indian, 184 Malay, and 750 Han Chinese) undergoing total hysterectomy surgery. Methods Morphine consumption, preoperative pain, and postoperative pain were evaluated in relation to genetic variability comprising 19 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 14 genes involved in glial activation, inflammatory signaling, and neuronal regulation, plus OPRM1 (1 SNP) and COMT (3 SNPs). Results Pre- and postoperative pain and age were associated with increased and decreased morphine consumption, respectively. In Chinese patients, only 8% of the variability in consumption could be explained by these nongenetic and genetic (BDNF, IL1B, IL6R, CRP, OPRM1, COMT, MYD88) factors. However, in Indian patients, 41% of morphine consumption variability could be explained by age (explaining Conclusions This is the highest known value reported for genetic contributions (38%) to morphine use in the acute postoperative pain setting. Our findings highlight the need to incorporate both genetic and nongenetic factors and consider ethnicity-dependent and nonadditive genotypic models in the assessment of factors that contribute to variability in opioid use.
- Published
- 2021