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Childhood Brain Tumors: A Review of Strategies to...
Journal article

Childhood Brain Tumors: A Review of Strategies to Translate CNS Drug Delivery to Clinical Trials

Abstract

Brain and spinal tumors affect 1 in 1000 people by 25 years of age, and have diverse histological, biological, anatomical and dissemination characteristics. A mortality of 30-40% means the majority are cured, although two-thirds have life-long disability, linked to accumulated brain injury that is acquired prior to diagnosis, and after surgery or chemo-radiotherapy. Only four drugs have been licensed globally for brain tumors in 40 years and only one for children. Most new cancer drugs in clinical trials do not cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Techniques to enhance brain tumor drug delivery are explored in this review, and cover those that augment penetration of the BBB, and those that bypass the BBB. Developing appropriate delivery techniques could improve patient outcomes by ensuring efficacious drug exposure to tumors (including those that are drug-resistant), reducing systemic toxicities and targeting leptomeningeal metastases. Together, this drug delivery strategy seeks to enhance the efficacy of new drugs and enable re-evaluation of existing drugs that might have previously failed because of inadequate delivery. A literature review of repurposed drugs is reported, and a range of preclinical brain tumor models available for translational development are explored.

Authors

Rahman R; Janowski M; Killick-Cole CL; Singleton WGB; Campbell E; Walczak P; Khatua S; Faltings L; Symons M; Schneider JR

Journal

Cancers, Vol. 15, No. 3,

Publisher

MDPI

Publication Date

February 1, 2023

DOI

10.3390/cancers15030857

ISSN

2072-6694

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