PMID: 2506817Aug 1, 1989Paper

Intra-arterial chemotherapy of malignant glioma after osmotic blood-brain barrier disruption

Gan to kagaku ryoho. Cancer & chemotherapy
K YamadaT Hosoya

Abstract

Reversible transient osmotic blood-brain barrier disruption was used to increase drug delivery to the brain. The authors treated 10 cases of malignant gliomas with intra-arterial chemotherapy after osmotic blood-brain barrier disruption. Ten patients received intra-arterial anticancer drugs (5-FU, ACNU, IFN-beta) after intra-arterial infusion of 20% mannitol to open the blood-brain barrier at the tumor site. Clinical responses in 9 evaluable cases were 1 Complete Response, 3 Partial Responses, 5 No Change and no Progressive Disease in CT examination. Response rate was 44.4% (4/9). The most untoward effect of this method was myelosuppression. Platelet and leukocyte count diminished below 20,000 and 2,000, respectively in 3 cases, and 2 out of these 3 cases died of severe infection. The other complications were eye pain during mannitol infusion in all cases, when the selective catheterization of the internal carotid artery failed to pass the origin of the ophthalmic artery. Decreased activity was seen in 70%, nausea and vomiting in 50%, swelling of external decompression area in 33%, increased neurological deficit in 20%, but all these side effects were transient. This method was considered an effective treatment for malignant gl...Continue Reading

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