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Brain tumor chemo-radiotherapy: a study of direct intratumoral perfusion with antineoplastic drugs; Chimio-radiotherapie des tumeurs cerebrales: interet de l'injection intratumorale de drogues antineoplasiques

Abstract

High grade gliomas are aggressive tumors for which current treatments remain palliative. Radiotherapy efficacy is restricted by the surrounding brain tissue tolerance. One method based on the concomitant use of chemotherapeutic drugs and external photon irradiation has been proposed to improve the treatment outcome. The systemic administration of drugs is not effective in achieving the therapeutic level of drug needed for brain tumor treatment. This is due to the blood brain barrier (BBB) that prevents molecules passing through the vascular endothelium. Recent methods have been developed to circumvent the BBB. Among them, convection-enhanced delivery (CED) relies on the continuous infusion of a fluid containing a therapeutic agent, under a pressure gradient. It permits a homogeneous and controlled drug distribution. The aims of this study were to characterise the CED method, and then to utilize it for glioma treatment in preclinical studies. Several drugs were tested: cisplatin, carbo-platin, oxaliplatin, and iodo-deoxyuridine. Two radiation modalities were evaluated: synchrotron stereotactic radiotherapy (monochromatic beam < 100 keV) and high energy irradiation (6 MV) obtained with a conventional medical linear accelerator. The results obtained reveal that the effectiveness of the combined treatment (platinated drug plus photon irradiation) is highly related to that of the chemotherapy.  More>>
Authors:
Publication Date:
Oct 15, 2007
Product Type:
Thesis/Dissertation
Report Number:
FRNC-TH-7502
Resource Relation:
Other Information: TH: These physique pour l'instrumentation; 200 refs.; Also available from Bibliotheque Universitaire de Sciences de Grenoble, 430 avenue de la Bibliotheque BP66 Domaine Universitaire, 38402 - Saint-Martin d'Heres cedex (France)
Subject:
62 RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE; ANTINEOPLASTIC DRUGS; CHEMOTHERAPY; COMBINED THERAPY; EXTERNAL IRRADIATION; GLIOMAS; PERFORMANCE TESTING; RADIOTHERAPY; SYNCHROTRON RADIATION; X RADIATION
OSTI ID:
21182824
Research Organizations:
Grenoble-1 Univ. Joseph Fourier, 38 (France)
Country of Origin:
France
Language:
French
Other Identifying Numbers:
TRN: FR0802015057084
Availability:
Available from INIS in electronic form
Submitting Site:
FRN
Size:
262 pages
Announcement Date:
Jul 20, 2009

Citation Formats

Rousseau, J. Brain tumor chemo-radiotherapy: a study of direct intratumoral perfusion with antineoplastic drugs; Chimio-radiotherapie des tumeurs cerebrales: interet de l'injection intratumorale de drogues antineoplasiques. France: N. p., 2007. Web.
Rousseau, J. Brain tumor chemo-radiotherapy: a study of direct intratumoral perfusion with antineoplastic drugs; Chimio-radiotherapie des tumeurs cerebrales: interet de l'injection intratumorale de drogues antineoplasiques. France.
Rousseau, J. 2007. "Brain tumor chemo-radiotherapy: a study of direct intratumoral perfusion with antineoplastic drugs; Chimio-radiotherapie des tumeurs cerebrales: interet de l'injection intratumorale de drogues antineoplasiques." France.
@misc{etde_21182824,
title = {Brain tumor chemo-radiotherapy: a study of direct intratumoral perfusion with antineoplastic drugs; Chimio-radiotherapie des tumeurs cerebrales: interet de l'injection intratumorale de drogues antineoplasiques}
author = {Rousseau, J}
abstractNote = {High grade gliomas are aggressive tumors for which current treatments remain palliative. Radiotherapy efficacy is restricted by the surrounding brain tissue tolerance. One method based on the concomitant use of chemotherapeutic drugs and external photon irradiation has been proposed to improve the treatment outcome. The systemic administration of drugs is not effective in achieving the therapeutic level of drug needed for brain tumor treatment. This is due to the blood brain barrier (BBB) that prevents molecules passing through the vascular endothelium. Recent methods have been developed to circumvent the BBB. Among them, convection-enhanced delivery (CED) relies on the continuous infusion of a fluid containing a therapeutic agent, under a pressure gradient. It permits a homogeneous and controlled drug distribution. The aims of this study were to characterise the CED method, and then to utilize it for glioma treatment in preclinical studies. Several drugs were tested: cisplatin, carbo-platin, oxaliplatin, and iodo-deoxyuridine. Two radiation modalities were evaluated: synchrotron stereotactic radiotherapy (monochromatic beam < 100 keV) and high energy irradiation (6 MV) obtained with a conventional medical linear accelerator. The results obtained reveal that the effectiveness of the combined treatment (platinated drug plus photon irradiation) is highly related to that of the chemotherapy. The data, obtained with the platinated chemotherapy, also show that high-energy X-ray irradiation (6 MV) is as effective as synchrotron X-ray irradiation. The results broaden the applicability of this chemotherapeutic approach to clinical trials. (author)}
place = {France}
year = {2007}
month = {Oct}
}