Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 2024
Enhancing brain entry and therapeutic activity of chimeric antigen receptor T cells with intra-arterial NEO100 in a mouse model of CNS lymphoma.
Malignancies of the CNS are difficult to treat because the blood-brain barrier (BBB) prevents most therapeutics from reaching the intracranial lesions at sufficiently high concentrations. This also applies to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, for which systemic delivery is inferior to direct intratumoral or intraventricular injection of the cells. The authors previously reported on a novel approach to safely and reversibly open the BBB of mice by applying intra-arterial (IA) injections of NEO100, a pharmaceutical-grade version of the natural monoterpene perillyl alcohol. The authors hypothesized that this method would enable enhanced brain entry and therapeutic activity of intravenously delivered CAR T cells, which the authors tested in a mouse model of CNS lymphoma. ⋯ BBB opening by IA NEO100 facilitates brain entry of intravenously delivered CD19 CAR T cells. The long-term survival of all mice with CNS lymphoma, along with the disappearance of the tumor as determined with imaging, suggests that this one-time therapeutic intervention was curative. BBB opening by IA NEO100 may offer a novel option to increase brain access by CAR T cells.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 2024
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyA prospective randomized comparison of functional and cosmetic outcomes of a coronal zigzag incision versus a conventional straight incision pattern for craniotomy.
Wound healing problems after neurosurgical procedures can lead to serious complications and may require complex revision or even reconstructive surgery. Therefore, optimal surgical management is critical to prevent complications. In a recent experimental study in animals, the authors demonstrated the superiority of a zigzag skin incision over a straight incision pattern. In this study, the authors applied these findings to clinical situations of neurosurgical patients with an indication for a coronal skin incision. The aim of this study was to objectively assess the functional and cosmetic outcomes between straight coronal and zigzag incisions in neurosurgical procedures. ⋯ A zigzag coronal skin incision pattern leads to significantly superior functional and cosmetic outcome scores. For certain patient groups, these findings may prove to be practice-changing.