Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND In the setting of malignant glioma, cytotoxic drugs are often inhibited from accessing the tumor site due to the blood-brain-barrier (BBB). Identifying agents that transiently increase BBB permeability would advance glioma treatment. Ibrutinib, an FDA approved lymphoma treatment, has previously impaired aortic endothelial adhesion and in combination with cytotoxic therapy, increased rodent glioma model survival. In this study, we propose ibrutinib inhibits brain endothelial cell junctional expression to disrupt BBB integrity and increase chemotherapy delivery to malignant glioma cells. METHODS Using rat glioma cells, S635, we evaluated treatment effects with doxil (3mg/kg), ibrutinib (25mg/kg) and combination therapy. We measured effects with serial brain MRIs, doxil plasma and brain regional concentrations, along with 3kD dextran permeability. To evaluate the effects of ibrutinib on in vitro brain endothelial cells, we measured changes in cell-cell electrical impedance and rhodamine efflux, as a surrogate of Abcb1 transporter function, over time (0 to 8h) and at varied drug concentrations (1, 5, and 10µM ibrutinib). RESULTS Ibrutinib in combination with doxil, prolonged median survival in rodent glioma models (18 vs. 24days, p<0.05). MRI findings demonstrated a -14 or -53% vs -75% tumor volume change with doxil or ibrutinib alone vs. combination therapy, respectively (p<0.05). Comparing combination therapy vs. doxil alone, ibrutinib increased CNS concentrations of doxil in the tumor injected brain regions with statistical significance (56ng/mL vs. 74.6ng/mL, p<0.05). In in vitro studies, ibrutinib decreased brain endothelial cell-cell impedance maximally at 2 hours, in a dose dependently without affecting cell viability. Additionally, we observed ibrutinib dose dependently inhibit Abcb1 activity in both endothelial and glioma cells. CONCLUSION Our results suggest ibrutinib increases brain endothelial permeability by causing junctional disruption and inhibition of Abcb1, resulting in increased CNS drug entry and prolonged survival in glioma rat models.

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