Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche

Cancer-induced bone pain is the most common complication in patients with bone metastases. It causes a significant reduction in patient quality of life. Recent studies using preclinical models have demonstrated the role of the bone marrow microenvironment (osteoclasts, osteoblasts, macrophages, mast...

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Main Authors: Francesco Amato, Erminia Gilda Morrone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Publiediting 2019-01-01
Series:Pathos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pathos-journal.com/2019_1_193.html
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spelling doaj-6ab57556f9704fab91d2dc6006642eca2020-11-24T23:07:52ZengPublieditingPathos1593-23542385-07442019-01-01261Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeuticheFrancesco Amato0Erminia Gilda Morrone1Direttore UOC Terapia del Dolore e CP Azienda Ospedaliera Cosenza, Centro Hub RegionaleBiologa, Associazione Centro Studi Terapia del Dolore, CosenzaCancer-induced bone pain is the most common complication in patients with bone metastases. It causes a significant reduction in patient quality of life. Recent studies using preclinical models have demonstrated the role of the bone marrow microenvironment (osteoclasts, osteoblasts, macrophages, mast cells, mesenchymal stem cells and fibroblasts) in bone pain metastases development. Available analgesic treatments for bone pain metastases, such as opioids that target the central nervous system, come with severe side effects as well as the risk of abuse and addiction. Therefore, alternative treatments are needed to develop more effective and safer targeted therapies.https://www.pathos-journal.com/2019_1_193.htmlCancer-induced bone painbone marrow microenvironmentbone metastasesosteoclastsmacrophages
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesco Amato
Erminia Gilda Morrone
spellingShingle Francesco Amato
Erminia Gilda Morrone
Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
Pathos
Cancer-induced bone pain
bone marrow microenvironment
bone metastases
osteoclasts
macrophages
author_facet Francesco Amato
Erminia Gilda Morrone
author_sort Francesco Amato
title Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
title_short Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
title_full Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
title_fullStr Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
title_full_unstemmed Pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - Il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
title_sort pain in bone metastases: from physiopathology to therapeutic options - il dolore nelle metastasi ossee: dalla fisiopatologia alle opzioni terapeutiche
publisher Publiediting
series Pathos
issn 1593-2354
2385-0744
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Cancer-induced bone pain is the most common complication in patients with bone metastases. It causes a significant reduction in patient quality of life. Recent studies using preclinical models have demonstrated the role of the bone marrow microenvironment (osteoclasts, osteoblasts, macrophages, mast cells, mesenchymal stem cells and fibroblasts) in bone pain metastases development. Available analgesic treatments for bone pain metastases, such as opioids that target the central nervous system, come with severe side effects as well as the risk of abuse and addiction. Therefore, alternative treatments are needed to develop more effective and safer targeted therapies.
topic Cancer-induced bone pain
bone marrow microenvironment
bone metastases
osteoclasts
macrophages
url https://www.pathos-journal.com/2019_1_193.html
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