Abstract

Arterial infusion of select chemotherapeutic agents has been shown to deliver increased drug concentration to brain tumors with reduced systemic toxicity. In this study, nine patients with histologically confirmed malignant glioma received cisplatin 110 mg and BCNU 300 mg fixed dose. All patients had received standard doses of cranial radiation after their initial surgical procedures. In three patients, intraoperative modification of the cerebral circulation was accomplished prior to the actual infusion because the vascular supply of the tumor arose from major arteries other than a single internal carotid artery. Supraophthalmic catheterization technique was employed. No neurological deficits occurred post infusion. The radiographic response rate was 25%. No responses were seen in patients who received less than 69 mg/M2 cisplatin this combination. The longest survival is 11+ months in a patient with anaplastic astrocytoma. Our first thirteen patients received cisplatin 150-200 mg and BCNU 300 mg for each infusion with a response rate of 83% in evaluable patients. Since modest reduction in cisplatin dose dramatically reduced the response rate, future studies should be directed at fine tuning the dose of this drug, or at neutralizing recirculating drug after its high dose first pass through the arterial circulation.

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