Temozolomide Delivered by Intracerebral Microinfusion is Safe and Efficacious Against Malignant Gliomas in Rats
Intracerebral microinfusion (ICM) is an innovative technique of delivering therapeutic agents throughout large portions of the brain that circumvents the blood-brain barrier, minimizes systemic toxicity, and provides a homogeneous distribution of the infused agent. Temozolomide is a novel methylatin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2000-10, Vol.6 (10), p.4148-4153 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Intracerebral
microinfusion (ICM) is an innovative technique of delivering
therapeutic agents throughout large portions of the brain that
circumvents the blood-brain barrier, minimizes systemic toxicity, and
provides a homogeneous distribution of the infused agent. Temozolomide
is a novel methylating agent with proven efficacy against malignant
gliomas (MGs) after systemic administration but with dose-limiting
myelotoxicity. Because MGs rarely metastasize, systemic drug delivery
is unnecessary. Therefore, we evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of
ICM with temozolomide in an athymic rat model of human MGs. Treatment
of rats by ICM with temozolomide 3 days after intracerebral challenge
with D54 human MG xenograft increased median survival by 128% compared
with rats treated by ICM with saline, by 113% compared with rats
treated with i.p. saline, and by 100% compared with rats treated with
i.p. temozolomide ( P < 0.001). Delay of treatment
until 9 days after tumor challenge still resulted in a 23% increase in
median survival in rats treated by ICM of temozolomide compared with
rats treated with i.p. temozolomide. In addition, overall, 21.7% of
rats treated by ICM with temozolomide survived for >100 days without
clinical or histological evidence of tumor. The dose of temozolomide
delivered by ICM in this study was limited only by drug solubility, and
no neurological or systemic toxicity could be attributed to ICM with
temozolomide. Therefore, ICM of temozolomide may offer significant
advantages in the treatment of MGs. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |