Abstract

Tacrolimus (FK506), an immunosuppressive drug, has been shown to exert a potent neuroprotective activity when administered immediately after occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) in a nonhuman primate model of stroke. Here, we assessed the neuroprotective efficacy of tacrolimus with delayed treatment using the same model and compared with that of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA). Ischemic insult was induced by photochemically induced thrombotic occlusion of MCA in cynomolgus monkeys, and tacrolimus (0.2 mg/kg) and/or rt-PA (1.0 mg/kg) was intravenously administered 2 h after MCA occlusion. In another experiment, tacrolimus (0.1 mg/kg) was administered 4 h after MCA occlusion. Neurological deficits were monitored for 28 days after the ischemic insult and cerebral infarct volumes were measured with brain slices. With drug administration 2 h after the ischemic insult, tacrolimus significantly reduced neurological deficits and infarct volumes in the cerebral cortex without affecting the recanalization pattern in the MCA, however, rt-PA did not significantly improve neurological deficits or infarct volumes, even though it increased the recanalization rate of the occluded MCA. Combined treatment with tacrolimus and rt-PA exerted additional protection. Administration of tacrolimus 4 h after the ischemic insult still showed significant amelioration of neurological deficits. These results suggested that tacrolimus had a wider therapeutic time window than rt-PA in the nonhuman primate stroke model.

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