Emerging Therapeutic Strategies for Brain Tumors

AbstractNearly thirty thousand incidences of primary and 300 thousand incidences of metastatic brain cancer are diagnosed in the USA each year. It has a high mortality rate and is often unresponsive to the standard of care, which includes surgical resection, radiation, and chemotherapy. These treatment strategies are also hindered by their invasiveness and toxic effects on healthy cells and tissues. Furthermore, the blood –brain/tumor barrier severely limits delivery of anti-cancer therapeutics administered intravenously to brain tumors, resulting in poor tumor response to the treatment. There is a critical need to develop new approaches to brain cancer therapy that can overcome these limitations. Focused ultrasoun d has emerged as a modality that addresses many of these limitations and has the potential to alter the treatment paradigm for brain cancer. Ultrasound transmitted through the skull can be focused on tumors and used for targeted ablation or opening the vascular barriers for drug delivery. This revie w provides insight on the current status of these unique ultrasound techniques, different strategies of using this technique for brain cancer, experience in preclinical models, and potential for clinical translation. We also debate the safety perspective of these techniques and discuss potential ave nues for future work in noninvasive planning, monitoring, and evaluation of the ultrasonic neurointervention.
Source: NeuroMolecular Medicine - Category: Neurology Source Type: research