articleClinical Cancer ResearchSep 9, 2010BRONZE OA

Heterogeneous Blood–Tumor Barrier Permeability Determines Drug Efficacy in Experimental Brain Metastases of Breast Cancer

Texas Tech University · The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · +4 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

Analysis of over 2,000 brain metastases from two models (human 231-BR-Her2 and murine 4T1-BR5) showed partial BTB permeability compromise in greater than 89% of lesions, varying in magnitude within and between metastases. Brain metastasis uptake of ¹⁴C-paclitaxel and ¹⁴C-doxorubicin was generally greater than normal brain but less than 15% of that of other tissues or peripheral metastases, and only reached cytotoxic concentrations in a small subset (∼10%) of the most permeable metastases. Neither drug significantly decreased the experimental brain metastatic ability of 231-BR-Her2 tumor cells. BTB permeability was associated with vascular remodeling and correlated with overexpression of the pericyte protein desmin.

Conclusions

This work shows that the BTB remains a significant impediment to standard chemotherapeutic delivery and efficacy in experimental brain metastases of breast cancer. New brain permeable drugs will be needed. Evidence is presented for vascular remodeling in BTB permeability alterations.

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692
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23.81
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100%
References
88
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Authors

14

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Brain metastasis
  • Doxorubicin
  • Blood–brain barrier
  • Vascular permeability
  • Breast cancer
  • In vivo
  • Metastasis
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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