New pain-relief opioid could be much less addictive than morphine, rodent study finds

A new synthetic opioid designed to relieve pain could hold promise for replacing addictive painkillers like morphine or fentanyl in patients, a study in lab rats suggests.

The research hints that the new opioid carries a lower risk of addiction — though it's likely not completely risk-free.

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In the 1950s, a class of highly potent opioids called nitazenes was developed and offered 1,000 times more relief than morphine, but they carried a much higher risk of overdose. Michael Michaelides, a pharmacologist at the National Institute on Drug Abuse, told Live Science in an email that "research using nitazenes was stopped and they were largely forgotten until they re-emerged as street drugs a few years ago."

But now, in a study published April 1 in the journal Nature, Michaelides and his colleagues developed a new patented nitazene called DFNZ that offers pain relief without slowing down breathing as sharply as other nitazenes do. That makes it much less likely to cause an overdose.

Additionally, while many opioids cause euphoria by flooding the brain with the neurotransmitter dopamine, DFNZ did not trigger a large surge of the chemical. That suggests it might not cause euphoria and thus may carry a lower risk of addiction.

Natashia Swalve, an assistant professor of behavioral neuroscience who studies drug addiction at Grand Valley State University and was not involved with the work. However, she cautioned that the self-administration test "still leads me to believe that there is a potential for an addictive profile."

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In another experiment, the researchers wanted to see whether DFNZ might be useful for treating heroin addiction. They administered heroin to rats, provided them with a lever to self-administer more heroin, and then treated them with either DFNZ, fentanyl or a placebo drug. Rats receiving the placebo pressed the lever significantly more times than rats treated with either fentanyl or DFNZ, suggesting these opioids tempered the urge to use heroin.

Based on these results, "DFNZ could potentially be used for the treatment of opioid use disorder similar to how methadone or buprenorphine are used," Michaelides suggested. "But rigorous multi-phase clinical trials would have to first demonstrate its safety and efficacy, and it would need to receive regulatory approval."

In their paper, the researchers noted that they didn't study the impact pain could have on the addictive potential of DFNZ. In other words, there's a worry that the pain relief provided by the drug could pose a higher risk of addiction, even in the absence of euphoria.

With aspirations that the new opioid may one day be used to treat chronic conditions such as cancer or post-surgical pain, it's important to determine whether rodents in constant pain are more likely to repeatedly press the lever even when DFNZ is withdrawn.

Swalve added that the researchers only tested the addictive potential of a pain-relieving dose of the drug. They should also assess higher doses, she said, because people could potentially take larger volumes than prescribed.

With multiple safety tests and clinical trials still to run, Swalve expects it would take at least a decade before DFNZ reaches the hospital.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not meant to offer medical advice.

Gomez, J. L., Ventriglia, E. N., Frangos, Z. J., Sulima, A., Robertson, M. J., Sacco, M. D., Budinich, R. C., Giosan, I. M., Xie, T., Solis, O., Tischer, A. E., Bossert, J. M., Caldwell, K. E., Bonbrest, H., Essmann, A., Garçon-Poca, Z. M., Choi, S., Noya, M. R., Limiac, F., . . . Michaelides, M. (2026). A µ-opioid receptor superagonist analgesic with minimal adverse effects. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10299-9

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