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Treatment
> Stem
Cells
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Neurosurgical Focus,
Volume 19, September 2005. (Review Article)
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Abstract |
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Stem cell therapies for
malignant glioma
Moneeb
Ehtesham, M.D., Charles B. Stevenson, M.D., And Reid C. Thompson, M.D.
Department of Neurological
Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee
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The prognosis for patients
with malignant glioma, which is the most common primary intracranial
neoplasm, remains dismal despite
significant progress in neurooncological therapies and
technology.
This is largely due to the inability
of current treatment strategies to address the highly invasive nature
of this disease.
Malignant glial cells often disseminate
throughout the brain, making it exceedingly difficult to target and
treat all intracranial neoplastic foci, with the
result that tumor recurrence is inevitable despite aggressive surgery
and adjuvant radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy.
The use of neural stem cells (NSCs) as
delivery vehicles for tumor-toxic molecules represents the first
experimental strategy aimed
specifically at targeting disseminated tumor pockets.
Investigators have demonstrated that NSCs possess
robust tropism for infiltrating tumor cells, and that they can be used
to deliver therapeutic agents directly to tumor
satellites, with significant therapeutic benefit.
With the aim of developing these findings
into a clinically viable technology
that would not be hindered by ethical and tissue rejection–related
concerns, the use of adult tissue–derived stem
cells has recently been explored.
These technologies represent important
progress in the development of a treatment strategy
that can specifically target disseminated neoplastic pockets within
the brain.
Despite encouraging results in
preclinical models, however, there are significant impediments that
must be overcome prior to clinical implementation of
this strategy.
Key among these are an inadequate
understanding of the specific tropic mechanisms that govern NSC
migration toward invasive tumor, and the need to refine the processes
used to generate tumor-tropic stem cells from
adult tissues so that this can be accomplished in a clinically
practicable fashion.
Despite these limitations, the use of
stem cell therapies for brain tumors holds significant promise and may
emerge as an important therapeutic modality for
patients with malignant glioma
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© Copyright 2005 AANS
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PDF Full Text: http://www.aans.org/education/journal/neurosurgical/Sep05/19-3-5.pdf
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