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Neuro Oncol 2004 6(4):300-306; DOI:10.1215/S1152851703000516
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Duke University Press

Preclinical Experimental Therapeutics

Penetration of intra-arterially administered vincristine in experimental brain tumor

Frances M. Boyle3, Susan L. Eller and Stuart A. Grossman

Bill Walsh Cancer Research Laboratories, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2065, Australia (F.M.B.); Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins Medical Center, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA (S.L.E., S.A.G.)

3 Address correspondence to Frances M. Boyle, Department of Medical Oncology, Royal North Shore Hospital, Pacific Highway, St. Leonards, Sydney, 2065 Australia (franb{at}bigpond.net.au).

Abstract

Vincristine is an integral part of the "PCV" regimen that is commonly administered to treat primary brain tumors. The efficacy of vincristine as a single agent in these tumors has been poorly studied. This study was designed to determine whether vincristine enters normal rat brain or an intracranially or subcutaneously implanted glioma and to assess the presence of the efflux pump P-glycoprotein (P-gp) on tumor and vascular endothelial cells. The 9L rat gliosarcoma was implanted intracranially and subcutaneously in three Fischer 344 rats. On day 7, [3H]vincristine (50 µCi, 4.8 µg) was injected into the carotid artery, and the animals were euthanized 10 or 20 min later. Quantitative autoradiography revealed that vincristine levels in the liver were 6- to 11-fold greater than in the i.c. tumor, and 15- to 37-fold greater than in normal brain, the reverse of the expected pattern with intra-arterial delivery. Vincristine levels in the s.c. tumor were 2-fold higher than levels in the i.c. tumor. P-gp was detected with JSB1 antibody in vascular endothelium of both normal brain and the i.c. tumor, but not in the tumor cells in either location, or in endothelial cells in the s.c. tumor. These results demonstrate that vincristine has negligible penetration of normal rat brain or i.c. 9L glioma despite intra-arterial delivery and the presence of blood-brain barrier dysfunction as demonstrated by Evan's blue. Furthermore, this study suggests that P-gp-mediated efflux from endothelium may explain these findings. The lack of penetration of vincristine into brain tumor and the paucity of single-agent activity studies suggest that vincristine should not be used in the treatment of primary brain tumors.




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