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Antinociceptive Effect of a p-Cymene/β-Cyclodextrin Inclusion Complex in a Murine Cancer Pain Model: Characterization Aided through a Docking Study.

Wagner B R SantosLícia T S PinaMarlange A de OliveiraLucas A B O SantosMarcus Vinícius de Aragão BatistaGabriela G G TrindadeMarcelo C DuarteJackson Roberto Guedes da Silva AlmeidaLucindo José Quintans-JuniorJullyana S S QuintansMairim R SerafiniHenrique Doouglas Melo CoutinhoGrażyna KowalskaTomasz BajRadosław KowalskiAdriana G Guimarães
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Pain is one of the most prevalent and difficult to manage symptoms in cancer patients, and conventional drugs present a range of adverse reactions. The development of β-cyclodextrins (β-CD) complexes has been used to avoid physicochemical and pharmacological limitations due to the lipophilicity of compounds such as p-Cymene (PC), a monoterpene with antinociceptive effects. Our aim was to obtain, characterize, and measure the effect of the complex of p-cymene and β-cyclodextrin (PC/β-CD) in a cancer pain model. Initially, molecular docking was performed to predict the viability of complex formation. Afterward, PC/β-CD was obtained by slurry complexation, characterized by HPLC and NMR. Finally, PC/β-CD was tested in a Sarcoma 180 (S180)-induced pain model. Molecular docking indicated that the occurrence of interaction between PC and β-CD is favorable. PC/β-CD showed complexation efficiency of 82.61%, and NMR demonstrated PC complexation in the β-CD cavity. In the S180 cancer pain model, PC/β-CD significantly reduced the mechanical hyperalgesia, spontaneous nociception, and nociception induced by non-noxious palpation at the doses tested ( p < 0.05) when compared to vehicle differently from free PC ( p > 0.05). Therefore, the complexation of PC in β-CD was shown to improve the pharmacological effect of the drug as well as reducing the required dose.
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