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      Etoposide-induced blood-brain barrier disruption

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          Abstract

          ✓ The intracarotid infusion of the anti-neoplastic compound, etoposide, has been shown to exert a dose-dependent effect on blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability. Etoposide, however, is formulated in a complex solvent solution containing alcohol, Tween 80, polyethylene glycol 300, and citric acid. To investigate the contribution of the solvent solution to BBB disruption, the authors studied Sprague-Dawley rats after the internal carotid artery infusion of the solvent solution with and without the addition of etoposide. Experiments were performed at four doses of drug and/or solvent. Disruption of the BBB was evaluated qualitatively by the appearance of the systemically administered dye, Evans blue, in the cerebral hemispheres and quantitatively by the ratio of gamma counts of the technetium-labeled chelate of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid ( 99mTc-DTPA) in the ipsilateral:contralateral hemisphere. Significant barrier opening was obtained in all four groups of animals infused with solvent plus etoposide. In the corresponding groups of rats infused with the solvent solution alone, BBB disruption was markedly lower. Only in the group infused with the largest dose of solvent was the hemispheric ratio of 99mTc-DTPA significantly different from saline-infused animals. Each of the groups with solvent plus etoposide had 99mTc-DTPA ratios significantly different from the control group. Intracarotid infusion and subsequent BBB disruption were well tolerated by the animals receiving either solvent alone or solvent and etoposide. Disruption of the BBB secondary to the intracarotid infusion of etoposide is primarily caused by the drug itself and not by the solvent solution.

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          Selective vulnerability of the blood-brain barrier in chemically induced lesions.

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            Changes of the blood-brain barrier in experimental metastatic brain tumors.

            An experimental model for blood-borne cerebral metastases was developed by introducing Walker 256 carcinoma cells selectively into the intracranial internal carotid artery of rats. This model was used to study the regional capillary permeability of rat brain and metastatic brain tumors of various sizes with the aid of 14C alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) quantitative autoradiography. The regional capillary permeability varied with the anatomical location and size of the tumor. Intraparenchymal tumors less than 1 mm in diameter showed no increased permeability to AIB. As the tumors enlarged over 1 mm in diameter, the permeability in the intraparenchymal tumors increased proportionally, but remained less than one-third of capillary permeability of subcutaneously transplanted tumors. Capillary permeability in the peripheral invasive part and necrotic center was less than in the viable part of large tumors. Capillary permeability in metastatic tumors of the choroid plexus and meninges was significantly higher than in tumors of the brain parenchyma. The results suggest that the uptake of chemotherapeutic agents that do not cross the blood-brain barrier easily varies with the anatomical location and size of the metastatic tumors.
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              Etoposide (VP-16-213)

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Neurosurgery
                Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
                0022-3085
                October 1984
                October 1984
                : 61
                : 4
                : 674-678
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Departments of Neoplastic Diseases, Neurosurgery, Biomathematical Sciences, Physics-Nuclear Medicine, and Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York
                Article
                10.3171/jns.1984.61.4.0674
                6470777
                52c233d4-7a20-4791-a32d-01b4b764a363
                © 1984
                History

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