Background: Women with endometriosis are more likely to have migraine. The mechanisms underlying this co-morbidity are unknown. Prolactin, a neurohormone secreted and released into circulation from the anterior pituitary, can sensitize sensory neurons from female, but not male, rodents, monkeys and human donors.
Methods: We used a syngeneic model of endometriosis to determine whether elevated prolactin levels can sensitize trigeminal ganglion neurons and increase vulnerability to migraine pain.
Results: Mice with endometriotic lesions showed increased serum prolactin levels and developed persistent abdominal, but not cephalic, allodynia. However, inhalation of a transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 agonist, umbellulone, a known environmental trigger of headache in some patients, elicited cephalic allodynia in mice with endometriosis but not sham controls, suggesting that endometriosis can promote sensitization of trigeminal neurons and migraine attacks. Endometriosis dysregulated the expression of prolactin receptor isoforms in trigeminal neurons and increased their excitability measured by in vitro patch clamp electrophysiology. Inhibition of pituitary prolactin following a 2-week treatment with a dopamine receptor agonist, cabergoline, prevented cephalic allodynia elicited by activation of trigeminal afferents with umbellulone. Cabergoline treatment also normalized the expression of prolactin receptor isoforms in trigeminal ganglia and the hyperexcitability of trigeminal neurons.
Conclusions: These data demonstrate that circulating prolactin in endometriosis promotes vulnerability to migraine through sensitization of trigeminal afferents. Clinically available dopamine receptor agonists or novel monoclonal antibodies targeting prolactin signaling may be effective for migraine prevention in women with endometriosis.
Keywords: chronic overlapping pain conditions; endometriosis; migraine; nociceptor sensitization; prolactin; prolactin receptor.