144 resultados para Regional administration
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
SUMMARY Regional drug delivery is an approach designed to improve the selectivity of anticancer chemotherapy. The advantage of regional treatments lies in increasing the drug concentration in the affected organ, while the rest of the organism is spared, thus improving efficacy and limiting treatment toxicity. The goal of this thesis was to assess the distribution throughout the body and the disposition (pharmacokinetics) of two anticancer agents, doxorubicin and gemcitabine, administered by two different regional administration modalities: isolated lung perfusion (ILP) for pulmonary metastases from soft tissue sarcomas and abdominal stop-flow hypoxic perfusion for advanced pancreatic cancers, respectively. For this purpose, two high-performance liquid chromatography methods were developed and validated. The first enabled the determination of doxorubicin in four different biological matrices: serum, reconstituted effluent, tissues with low levels of doxorubicin and tissues with high levels of doxorubicin. The second allows the analysis of gemcitabine and its principal metabolite dFdU in plasma. The administration of doxorubicin by ILP was studied in three preclinical studies (one on pigs and two on rats). It was first shown that, regardless of the administration mode, doxorubicin was not homogeneously distributed throughout the lung and that some regions remained out of reach. Secondly, it was demonstrated that doxorubicin did not adequately reach the tumours despite very high levels found in the lung. Finally, an attempt to enhance the doxorubicin tumoural uptake by pharmacologic modulation using two P-glycoprotein inhibitors, cyclosporin and valspodar, was unsuccessful. The last part of this work involves the administration of gemcitabine by abdominal stop-flow as a part of a phase I clinical trial in patients with advanced pancreatic disease or resistant malignant ascites. The study has demonstrated that the regional exposure to gemcitabine was increased while the exposure of the entire organism was similar to standard intravenous administrations. From a toxicological perspective, the procedure was rather well tolerated. However, even if no clinical response is expected from a phase I study, no hints of clinical responses were unfortunately observed. In conclusion, even if loco-regional therapies may afford the pharmacological advantage of increasing anticancer drug levels at the tumour site, further studies of these investigational treatment modalities are warranted to ascertain whether they can provide a significant improvement of the cancer therapy for patients, in terms of treatment tolerability, improved responses and survival rates. RÉSUMÉ L'administration locorégionale d'agents anticancéreux est une approche destinée à augmenter la sélectivité du traitement. L'avantage des traitements régionaux repose sur le fait que la concentration du médicament cytostatique est augmentée dans l'organe où est localisée la tumeur, alors que le reste de l'organisme est épargné, améliorant ainsi en théorie l'efficacité du traitement et en limitant sa toxicité. Le but de ce travail de thèse avait pour objectif de préciser, la pharmacocinétique au sein de l'organisme de deux agents anticancéreux, la doxorubicine et la gemcitabine, administrés par deux types de perfusions loco-régionales: la perfusion isolée du poumon (ILP) pour les métastases pulmonaires de sarcomes des tissus mous, et la perfusion hypoxique (stop-flow) abdominale pour les cancers avancés du pancréas. Dans cette optique, deux méthodes de chromatographie liquide à haute performance ont été développées et validées. La première permet le dosage de la doxorubicine dans quatre milieux biologiques: le sérum, l'effluent reconstitué, ainsi que des tissus contenant des concentrations faibles et élevées en doxorubicine. La seconde méthode permet le dosage dans le plasma de la gemcitabine et de son principal métabolite, le dFdU. L'administration de doxorubicine par ILP a été étudiée dans trois études précliniques (une chez le porc et deux chez le rat). Il a été montré, dans un premier temps, que la doxorubicine n'était pas distribuée de façon homogène au sein du poumon, quel que soit son mode d'administration. Dans un deuxième temps, il a été démontré que le médicament n'atteignait pas les tumeurs de façon adéquate, malgré des concentrations très élevées au sein du tissu pulmonaire. Finalement, une tentative d'augmenter la pénétration tumorale de la doxorubicine par une modulation pharmacologique de la P-glycoprotéine en utilisant la cyclosporine et le valspodar n'a pas abouti. La dernière partie de ce travail concernait l'administration de gemcitabine par stop-flow abdominal dans le cadre d'une étude clinique de phase I menée auprès de patients atteints de cancers avancés du pancréas ou d'ascites malignes réfractaires. Cette étude a démontré que l'exposition régionale à la gemcitabine était augmentée, alors que l'exposition de l'organisme était similaire à une administration de dose standard par voie intraveineuse. D'un point de vue toxicologique la procédure fut relativement bien tolérée. Cependant, même s'il n'est pas attendu de réponses cliniques dans une étude de phase I, aucun signe de réponse au traitement n'a pu être malheureusement observé. En conclusion, même si les thérapies loco-régionales présentent -en théorie- l'avantage pharmacologique d'augmenter les taux du médicaments anticancéreux sur le site de la tumeur, d'autres études précliniques et cliniques sont nécessaires pour démontrer que ces nouvelles modalités de traitement, de nature investigationelle à présent, apportent une réelle amélioration pour la prise en charge des patients cancéreux, en terme de tolérance au traitement et de l'augmentation des taux de réponses et de survie.
Resumo:
AbstractCancer treatment has shifted from cytotoxic and nonspecific chemotherapy to chronic treatment with targeted molecular therapies. These new classes of drugs directed against cancer-specific molecules and signaling pathways, act at a particular level of the tumor cell development. However, in both types of therapeutic approaches (standard cytotoxic chemotherapy and targeted signal transduction inhibitions), toxicity and side effects can occur. The aim of this thesis was to investigate various approaches to improve the activity and tolerability of cancer treatment, in a clinical setting, a) by molecular targeting through the use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), whose dosage can be adapted to each patient according to plasma levels, and, b) in a preclinical model, by tissue targeting with locoregional administration of cytotoxic chemotherapy to increase drug exposure in the target tissue while reducing systemic toxicity of the treatment.A comprehensive program for the Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) of the new class of targeted anticancer drugs of TKIs in patient's blood has been therefore initiated comprising the setting up, validation and clinical application of a multiplex assay by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry of TKIs in plasma from cancer patients. Information on drugs exposure may be clinically useful for an optimal follow-up of patients' anticancer treatment, especially in case of less than optimal clinical response, occurrence of adverse drug reaction effects and the numerous risks of drug-drug interactions. In this context, better knowledge of the potential drug interactions between TKIs and widely prescribed co- medications is of critical importance for clinicians, to improve their daily care of cancer patients. For one of the first TKI imatinib, TDM interpretation is nowadays based on total plasma concentrations but, only the unbound (free) form is likely to enter cell to exert its pharmacological action. Pharmacokinetic analysis of the total and free plasma level of imatinib measured simultaneously in patients have allowed to refine and validate a population pharmacokinetic model integrating factors influencing in patients the exposure of pharmacological active species. The equation developed from this model may be used for extrapolating free imatinib plasma concentration based on the total plasma levels that are currently measured in TDM from patients. Finally, the specific influence of Pglycoprotein on the intracellular disposition of TKIs has been studies in cell systems using the siRNA silencing approach.Another approach to enhance the selectivity of anticancer treatment may be achieved by the loco-regional administration of a cytostatic agent to the target organ while sparing non- affected tissues. Isolated lung perfusion (ILP) was designed for the treatment of loco-regional malignancies of the lung but clinical results have been so far disappointing. It has been shown in a preclinical model in rats that ILP with the cytotoxic agent doxorubicin alone allows a high drug uptake in lung tissue, and a low systemic toxicity, but was characterized by a high spatial tissular heterogeneity in drug exposure and doxorubicin uptake in tumor was comparatively smaller than in normal lung tissue. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a new approach for the treatment of superficial tumors, and implies the application of a sensitizer activated by a laser light at a specific wavelength, that disrupts endothelial barrier of tumor vessels to increase locally the distribution of cytostatics into the tumor tissue. PDT pre-treatment before intravenous administration of liposomal doxorubicin was indeed shown to selectively increase drug uptake in tumors in a rat model of sarcoma tumors to the lung.RésuméLe traitement de certains cancers s'est progressivement transformé et est passé de la chimiothérapie, cytotoxique et non spécifique, au traitement chronique des patients avec des thérapies moléculaires ciblées. Ces médicaments ont une action ciblée en interférant à un niveau spécifique du développement de la cellule tumorale. Dans les deux types d'approches thérapeutiques (chimiothérapie cytotoxique et traitements ciblés), on est confronté à la présence de toxicité et aux effets secondaires du traitement anticancéreux. Le but de cette thèse a donc été d'étudier diverses approches visant à améliorer l'efficacité et la tolérabilité du traitement anticancéreux, a) dans le cadre d'une recherche clinique, par le ciblage moléculaire grâce aux inhibiteurs de tyrosines kinases (TKIs) dont la posologie est adaptée à chaque patient, et b) dans un modèle préclinique, par le ciblage tissulaire grâce à l'administration locorégionale de chimiothérapie cytotoxique, afin d'augmenter l'exposition dans le tissu cible et de réduire la toxicité systémique du traitement.Un programme de recherche sur le suivi thérapeutique (Therapeutic Drug Monitoring, TDM) des inhibiteurs de tyrosine kinases a été ainsi mis en place et a impliqué le développement, la validation et l'application clinique d'une méthode multiplex par chromatographie liquide couplée à la spectrométrie de masse en tandem des TKIs chez les patients souffrant de cancer. L'information fournie par le TDM sur l'exposition des patients aux traitements ciblés est cliniquement utile et est susceptible d'optimiser la dose administrée, notamment dans les cas où la réponse clinique au traitement des patients est sous-optimale, en présence d'effets secondaires du traitement ciblé, ou lorsque des risques d'interactions médicamenteuses sont suspectés. Dans ce contexte, l'étude des interactions entre les TKIs et les co-médications couramment associées est utile pour les cliniciens en charge d'améliorer au jour le jour la prise en charge du traitement anticancéreux. Pour le premier TKI imatinib, l'interprétation TDM est actuellement basée sur la mesure des concentrations plasmatiques totales alors que seule la fraction libre (médicament non lié aux protéines plasmatiques circulantes) est susceptible de pénétrer dans la cellule pour exercer son action pharmacologique. L'analyse pharmacocinétique des taux plasmatiques totaux et libres d'imatinib mesurés simultanément chez les patients a permis d'affiner et de valider un modèle de pharmacocinétique de population qui intègre les facteurs influençant l'exposition à la fraction de médicament pharmacologiquement active. L'équation développée à partir de ce modèle permet d'extrapoler les concentrations libres d'imatinib à partir des concentrations plasmatiques totales qui sont actuellement mesurées lors du TDM des patients. Finalement, l'influence de la P-glycoprotéine sur la disposition cellulaire des TKIs a été étudiée dans un modèle cellulaire utilisant l'approche par la technologie du siRNA permettant de bloquer sélectivement l'expression du gène de cette protéine d'efflux des médicaments.Une autre approche pour augmenter la sélectivité du traitement anticancéreux consiste en une administration loco-régionale d'un agent cytostatique directement au sein de l'organe cible tout en préservant les tissus sains. La perfusion isolée du poumon (ILP) a été conçue pour le traitement loco-régional des cancers affectant les tissus pulmonaires mais les résultats cliniques ont été jusqu'à ce jour décevants. Dans des modèles précliniques chez le rat, il a pu être démontré que l'ILP avec la doxorubicine, un agent cytotoxique, administré seul, permet une exposition élevée au niveau du tissu pulmonaire, et une faible toxicité systémique. Toutefois, cette technique est caractérisée par une importante variabilité de la distribution dans les tissus pulmonaires et une pénétration du médicament au sein de la tumeur comparativement plus faible que dans les tissus sains.La thérapie photodynamique (PDT) est une nouvelle approche pour le traitement des tumeurs superficielles, qui consiste en l'application d'un agent sensibilisateur activé par une lumière laser de longueur d'onde spécifique, qui perturbe l'intégrité physiologique de la barrière endothéliale des vaisseaux alimentant la tumeur et permet d'augmenter localement la pénétration des agents cytostatiques.Nos études ont montré qu'un pré-traitement par PDT permet d'augmenter sélectivement l'absorption de doxorubicine dans les tumeurs lors d'administration i.v. de doxorubicine liposomale dans un modèle de sarcome de poumons de rongeurs.Résumé large publicDepuis une dizaine d'année, le traitement de certains cancers s'est progressivement transformé et les patients qui devaient jusqu'alors subir des chimiothérapies, toxiques et non spécifiques, peuvent maintenant bénéficier de traitements chroniques avec des thérapies ciblées. Avec les deux types d'approches thérapeutiques, on reste cependant confronté à la toxicité et aux effets secondaires du traitement.Le but de cette thèse a été d'étudier chez les patients et dans des modèles précliniques les diverses approches visant à améliorer l'activité et la tolérance des traitements à travers un meilleur ciblage de la thérapie anticancéreuse. Cet effort de recherche nous a conduits à nous intéresser à l'optimisation du traitement par les inhibiteurs de tyrosines kinases (TKIs), une nouvelle génération d'agents anticancéreux ciblés agissant sélectivement sur les cellules tumorales, en particulier chez les patients souffrant de leucémie myéloïde chronique et de tumeurs stromales gastro-intestinales. L'activité clinique ainsi que la toxicité de ces TKIs paraissent dépendre non pas de la dose de médicament administrée, mais de la quantité de médicaments circulant dans le sang auxquelles les tumeurs cancéreuses sont exposées et qui varient beaucoup d'un patient à l'autre. A cet effet, nous avons développé une méthode par chromatographie couplée à la spectrométrie de masse pour mesurer chez les patients les taux de médicaments de la classe des TKIs dans la perspective de piloter le traitement par une approche de suivi thérapeutique (Therapeutic Drug Monitoring, TDM). Le TDM repose sur la mesure de la quantité de médicament dans le sang d'un patient dans le but d'adapter individuellement la posologie la plus appropriée: des quantités insuffisantes de médicament dans le sang peuvent conduire à un échec thérapeutique alors qu'un taux sanguin excessif peut entraîner des manifestations toxiques.Dans une seconde partie préclinique, nous nous sommes concentrés sur l'optimisation de la chimiothérapie loco-régionale dans un modèle de sarcome du poumon chez le rat, afin d'augmenter l'exposition dans la tumeur tout en réduisant la toxicité dans les tissus non affectés.La perfusion isolée du poumon (ILP) permet d'administrer un médicament anticancéreux cytotoxique comme la doxorubicine, sélectivement au niveau le tissu pulmonaire où sont généralement localisées les métastases de sarcome. L'administration par ILP de doxorubicine, toxique pour le coeur, a permis une forte accumulation des médicaments dans le poumon, tout en épargnant le coeur. Il a été malheureusement constaté que la doxorubicine ne pénètre que faiblement dans la tumeur sarcomateuse, témoignant des réponses cliniques décevantes observées avec cette approche en clinique. Nous avons ainsi étudié l'impact sur la pénétration tumorale de l'association d'une chimiothérapie cytotoxique avec la thérapie photodynamique (PDT) qui consiste en l'irradiation spécifique du tissu-cible cancéreux, après l'administration d'un agent photosensibilisateur. Dans ce modèle animal, nous avons observé qu'un traitement par PDT permet effectivement d'augmenter de façon sélective l'accumulation de doxorubicine dans les tumeurs lors d'administration intraveineuse de médicament.
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BACKGROUND: Regional administration of high doses of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interferon gamma (IFN gamma) to metastatic melanoma patients causes selective disruption of the tumor vasculature. This effect is paralleled by decreased endothelial cell proliferation and suppressed integrin alpha V beta 3-mediated adhesion in vitro. Overexpression of the cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) inhibitory protein p16INK4a was reported to interfere with integrin alpha V beta 3-dependent melanoma cell adhesion. MATERIALS AND METHODS: TNF- and IFN gamma-treated HUVEC were analyzed for cell cycle progression and for protein expression by flow cytometry and Western blotting, respectively. p16INK4a was overexpressed by transient transfection, and HUVEC adhesion was tested in short-term adhesion assays. RESULTS: TNF and IFN gamma synergistically induced a G1 arrest associated with reduced levels of cyclin D1 and cdk2, and increased expression of the cdk inhibitors p16INK4a, p21WAF and p27Kip1. p16INK4a overexpression, however, had no effect on alpha V beta 3-mediated adhesion. CONCLUSION: These results implicate the down-regulation of cyclin D1 and cdk-2, and up-regulation of p16INK4a, p21WAF and p27Kip1 in the suppression of endothelial cell proliferation induced by TNF/IFN gamma and demonstrate that increased p16INK4a levels are not sufficient to suppress alpha V beta 3-mediated endothelial cell adhesion.
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OBJECTIVES: Comparison of doxorubicin uptake, leakage and spatial regional blood flow, and drug distribution was made for antegrade, retrograde, combined antegrade and retrograde isolated lung perfusion, and pulmonary artery infusion by endovascular inflow occlusion (blood flow occlusion), as opposed to intravenous administration in a porcine model. METHODS: White pigs underwent single-pass lung perfusion with doxorubicin (320 mug/mL), labeled 99mTc-microspheres, and Indian ink. Visual assessment of the ink distribution and perfusion scintigraphy of the perfused lung was performed. 99mTc activity and doxorubicin levels were measured by gamma counting and high-performance liquid chromatography on 15 tissue samples from each perfused lung at predetermined localizations. RESULTS: Overall doxorubicin uptake in the perfused lung was significantly higher (P = .001) and the plasma concentration was significantly lower (P < .0001) after all isolated lung perfusion techniques, compared with intravenous administration, without differences between them. Pulmonary artery infusion (blood flow occlusion) showed an equally high doxorubicin uptake in the perfused lung but a higher systemic leakage than surgical isolated lung perfusion (P < .0001). The geometric coefficients of variation of the doxorubicin lung tissue levels were 175%, 279%, 226%, and 151% for antegrade, retrograde, combined antegrade and retrograde isolated lung perfusion, and pulmonary artery infusion by endovascular inflow occlusion (blood flow occlusion), respectively, compared with 51% for intravenous administration (P = .09). 99mTc activity measurements of the samples paralleled the doxorubicin level measurements, indicating a trend to a more heterogeneous spatial regional blood flow and drug distribution after isolated lung perfusion and blood flow occlusion compared with intravenous administration. CONCLUSIONS: Cytostatic lung perfusion results in a high overall doxorubicin uptake, which is, however, heterogeneously distributed within the perfused lung.
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Perfusion CT studies of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), involving sequential acquisition of cerebral CT sections during IV contrast material administration, have classically been reported to be achieved at 120 kVp. We hypothesized that using 80 kVp should result in the same image quality while significantly lowering the patient's radiation dose, and we evaluated this assumption. In five patients undergoing cerebral CT survey, one section level was imaged at 120 kVp and 80 kVp, before and after IV administration of iodinated contrast material. These four cerebral CT sections obtained in each patient were analyzed with special interest to contrast, noise, and radiation dose. Contrast enhancement at 80 kVp is significantly increased (P < .001), as well as contrast between gray matter and white matter after contrast enhancement (P < .001). Mean noise at 80 kVp is not statistically different (P = .042). Finally, performance of perfusion CT studies at 80 kVp, keeping mAs constant, lowers the radiation dose by a factor of 2.8. We, thus, conclude that 80 kVp acquisition of perfusion CT studies of rCBF will result in increased contrast enhancement and should improve rCBF analysis, with a reduced patient's irradiation.
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The pathophysiological role of an increase in circulating vasopressin in sustaining global and regional vasoconstriction in patients with congestive heart failure has not been established, particularly in patients with hyponatraemia. To assess this further, 20 patients with congestive heart failure refractory to digoxin and diuretics were studied before and 60 minutes after the intravenous injection (5 micrograms/kg) of the vascular antagonist of vasopressin [1(beta-mercapto-beta,beta-cyclopentamethylene-propionic acid), 2-(0-methyl) tyrosine] arginine vasopressin. Ten patients were hyponatraemic (plasma sodium less than 135 mmol/l) and 10 were normonatraemic. In both groups of patients the vascular vasopressin antagonist did not alter systemic or pulmonary artery pressures, right atrial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, cardiac index, or vascular resistances. Furthermore, there was no change in skin and hepatic blood flow in either group after the injection of the vascular antagonist. Only one patient in the hyponatraemic group showed considerable haemodynamic improvement. He had severe congestive heart failure and a high concentration of plasma vasopressin (51 pmol/l). Plasma renin activity, vasopressin, or catecholamine concentrations were not significantly changed in response to the administration of the vasopressin antagonist in either the hyponatraemic or the normonatraemic groups. Patients with hyponatraemia, however, had higher baseline plasma catecholamine concentrations, heart rate, pulmonary pressure and resistance, and lower hepatic blood flow than patients without hyponatraemia. Plasma vasopressin and plasma renin activity were slightly, though not significantly, higher in the hyponatraemic group. Thus the role of vasopressin in sustaining regional or global vasoconstriction seems limited in patients with congestive heart failure whether or not concomitant hyponatraemia is present. Vasopressin significantly increases the vascular tone only in rare patients with severe congestive heart failure and considerably increased vasopressin concentrations. Patients with hyponatraemia do, however, have raised baseline catecholamine concentrations, heart rate, pulmonary arterial pressure and resistance, and decreased hepatic blood flow.
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Regional citrate anticoagulation of the extracorporeal circuits (CRA) experienced considerable growth over the past decade. This development is partly explained by the significant progresses made in the field of bioengineering. These allow a secure administration of citrate, while an increasing availability of ionized calcium measurement at the bedside allows reactivity in monitoring the treatment. An increasing severity of the medical condition of patients requiring blood purification treatment gives more contrast to the profile of patient who may benefit from a CRA. If some methods of renal replacement therapy are well suited to this mode of anticoagulation, others are, to date, only at the stage of development and are applied under close medical supervision.
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Cocaine-induced neuroadaptation of stress-related circuitry and increased access to cocaine each putatively contribute to the transition from cocaine use to cocaine dependence. The present study tested the hypothesis that rats receiving extended versus brief daily access to cocaine would exhibit regional differences in levels of the stress-regulatory neuropeptide corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF). A secondary goal was to explore how CRF levels change in relation to the time since cocaine self-administration. Male Wistar rats acquired operant self-administration of cocaine and were assigned to receive daily long access (6 hours/day, LgA, n = 20) or short access (1 hour/day, ShA, n = 18) to intravenous cocaine self-administration (fixed ratio 1, ∼0.50 mg/kg/infusion). After at least 3 weeks, tissue CRF immunoreactivity was measured at one of three timepoints: pre-session, post-session or 3 hours post-session. LgA, but not ShA, rats showed increased total session and first-hour cocaine intake. CRF immunoreactivity increased within the dorsal raphe (DR) and basolateral, but not central, nucleus of the amygdala (BLA, CeA) of ShA rats from pre-session to 3 hours post-session. In LgA rats, CRF immunoreactivity increased from pre-session to 3 hours post-session within the CeA and DR but tended to decrease in the BLA. LgA rats showed higher CRF levels than ShA rats in the DR and, pre-session, in the BLA. Thus, voluntary cocaine intake engages stress-regulatory CRF systems of the DR and amygdala. Increased availability of cocaine promotes greater tissue CRF levels in these extrahypothalamic brain regions, changes associated here with a model of cocaine dependence.
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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Knowledge of cerebral blood flow (CBF) alterations in cases of acute stroke could be valuable in the early management of these cases. Among imaging techniques affording evaluation of cerebral perfusion, perfusion CT studies involve sequential acquisition of cerebral CT sections obtained in an axial mode during the IV administration of iodinated contrast material. They are thus very easy to perform in emergency settings. Perfusion CT values of CBF have proved to be accurate in animals, and perfusion CT affords plausible values in humans. The purpose of this study was to validate perfusion CT studies of CBF by comparison with the results provided by stable xenon CT, which have been reported to be accurate, and to evaluate acquisition and processing modalities of CT data, notably the possible deconvolution methods and the selection of the reference artery. METHODS: Twelve stable xenon CT and perfusion CT cerebral examinations were performed within an interval of a few minutes in patients with various cerebrovascular diseases. CBF maps were obtained from perfusion CT data by deconvolution using singular value decomposition and least mean square methods. The CBF were compared with the stable xenon CT results in multiple regions of interest through linear regression analysis and bilateral t tests for matched variables. RESULTS: Linear regression analysis showed good correlation between perfusion CT and stable xenon CT CBF values (singular value decomposition method: R(2) = 0.79, slope = 0.87; least mean square method: R(2) = 0.67, slope = 0.83). Bilateral t tests for matched variables did not identify a significant difference between the two imaging methods (P >.1). Both deconvolution methods were equivalent (P >.1). The choice of the reference artery is a major concern and has a strong influence on the final perfusion CT CBF map. CONCLUSION: Perfusion CT studies of CBF achieved with adequate acquisition parameters and processing lead to accurate and reliable results.
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Oxytocin (OT) is thought to play an important role in human interpersonal information processing and behavior. By inference, OT should facilitate empathic responding, i.e. the ability to feel for others and to take their perspective. In two independent double-blind, placebo-controlled between-subjects studies, we assessed the effect of intranasally administered OT on affective empathy and perspective taking, whilst also examining potential sex differences (e.g., women being more empathic than men). In study 1, we provided 96 participants (48 men) with an empathy scenario and recorded self reports of empathic reactions to the scenario, while in study 2, a sample of 120 individuals (60 men) performed a computerized implicit perspective taking task. Whilst results from Study 1 showed no influence of OT on affective empathy, we found in Study 2 that OT exerted an effect on perspective taking ability in men. More specifically, men responded faster than women in the placebo group but they responded as slowly as women in the OT group. We conjecture that men in the OT group adopted a social perspective taking strategy, such as did women in both groups, but not men in the placebo group. On the basis of results across both studies, we suggest that self-report measures (such as used in Study 1) might be less sensitive to OT effects than more implicit measures of empathy such as that used in Study 2. If these assumptions are confirmed, one could infer that OT effects on empathic responses are more pronounced in men than women, and that any such effect is best studied using more implicit measures of empathy rather than explicit self-report measures.
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RATIONALE: A dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is a well-documented neurobiological finding in major depression. Moreover, clinically effective therapy with antidepressant drugs may normalize the HPA axis activity. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to test whether citalopram (R/S-CIT) affects the function of the HPA axis in patients with major depression (DSM IV). METHODS: Twenty depressed patients (11 women and 9 men) were challenged with a combined dexamethasone (DEX) suppression and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) stimulation test (DEX/CRH test) following a placebo week and after 2, 4, and 16 weeks of 40 mg/day R/S-CIT treatment. RESULTS: The results show a time-dependent reduction of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol response during the DEX/CRH test both in treatment responders and nonresponders within 16 weeks. There was a significant relationship between post-DEX baseline cortisol levels (measured before administration of CRH) and severity of depression at pretreatment baseline. Multiple linear regression analyses were performed to identify the impact of psychopathology and hormonal stress responsiveness and R/S-CIT concentrations in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The magnitude of decrease in cortisol responsivity from pretreatment baseline to week 4 on drug [delta-area under the curve (AUC) cortisol] was a significant predictor (p<0.0001) of the degree of symptom improvement following 16 weeks on drug (i.e., decrease in HAM-D21 total score). The model demonstrated that the interaction of CSF S-CIT concentrations and clinical improvement was the most powerful predictor of AUC cortisol responsiveness. CONCLUSION: The present study shows that decreased AUC cortisol was highly associated with S-CIT concentrations in plasma and CSF. Therefore, our data suggest that the CSF or plasma S-CIT concentrations rather than the R/S-CIT dose should be considered as an indicator of the selective serotonergic reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) effect on HPA axis responsiveness as measured by AUC cortisol response.
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BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The determination of the carbon isotope ratio in androgen metabolites has been previously shown to be a reliable, direct method to detect testosterone misuse in the context of antidoping testing. Here, the variability in the 13C/12C ratios in urinary steroids in a widely heterogeneous cohort of professional soccer players residing in different countries (Argentina, Italy, Japan, South Africa, Switzerland and Uganda) is examined. METHODS: Carbon isotope ratios of selected androgens in urine specimens were determined using gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC-C-IRMS). RESULTS: Urinary steroids in Italian and Swiss populations were found to be enriched in 13C relative to other groups, reflecting higher consumption of C3 plants in these two countries. Importantly, detection criteria based on the difference in the carbon isotope ratio of androsterone and pregnanediol for each population were found to be well below the established threshold value for positive cases. CONCLUSIONS: The results obtained with the tested diet groups highlight the importance of adapting the criteria if one wishes to increase the sensitivity of exogenous testosterone detection. In addition, confirmatory tests might be rendered more efficient by combining isotope ratio mass spectrometry with refined interpretation criteria for positivity and subject-based profiling of steroids.
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Abstract Part I : Background : Isolated lung perfusion (ILP) was designed for the treatment of loco-regional malignancies of the lung. In contrast to intravenous (IV) drug application, ILP allows for a selective administration of cytostatic agents such as doxorubicin to the lung while sparing non-affected tissues. However, the clinical results with ILP were disappointing. Doxorubicinbased ILP on sarcoma rodent lungs suggested high overall doxorubicin concentrations within the perfused lung but a poor penetration of the cytostatic agent into tumors. The same holds true for liposomal-encapsulated macromolecular doxorubicin (LiporubicinTM) In specific conditions, low-dose photodynamic therapy (PDT) can enhance the distribution of macromolecules across the endothelial bamer in solid tumors. It was recently postulated that tumor neovessels were more responsive to PDT than the normal vasculature. We therefore hypothesized that Visudyne®-mediated PDT could selectively increase liposomal doxorubicin (LiporubicinTM) uptake in sarcoma tumors to rodent lungs during intravenous (IV) drug administration and isolated lung perfusion (ILP). Material and Methods : A sarcoma tumor was generated in the left lung of Fisher rats by subpleural injection of a sarcoma cell ,suspension via thoracotomy. Ten days later, LiporubicinTM is administered IV or by single pass antegrade ILP, with or without Visudyne® -mediated low-dose PDT pre-treatment of the sarcoma bearing lung. The drug concentration and distribution were assessed separately in tumors and lung tissues by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and fluorescence microscopy (FNI~, respectively. Results : PDT pretreatment before IV LiporubicinTM administration resulted in a significantly higher tumor drug uptake and tumor to lung drug ratio compared to IV drug injection alone without affecting the blood flow and drug distribution in the lung. PDT pre-treatment before LiporubicinTM-based ILP also resulted in a higher tumor drug uptake and a higher tumor to lung drug ratio compared to ILP alone, however, these differences were not significant due to a heterogeneous blood flow drug distribution during ILP which was further accentuated by PDT. Conclusions : Low-dose Visudyne®-mediated PDT pre-treatment has the potential to selectively enhance liposomal encapsulated doxorubicin uptake in tumors but not in normal lung tissue after IV drug application in a rat model of sarcoma tumors to the lung which opens new perspectives for the treatment of superficially spreading chemoresistant tumors of the chest cavity such as mesothelioma or malignant effusion. However, the impact of PDT on macromolecular drug uptake during ILP is limited since its therapeutic advantage is circumvented by ILP-induced heterogeneicity of blood flow and drug distribution Abstract Part II Background : Photodynamic therapy (PDT) with Visudyne® acts by direct cellular phototoxicity and/or by an indirect vascular-mediated effect. Here, we demonstrate that the vessel integrity interruption by PDT can promote the extravasation of a macromolecular agent in normal tissue. To obtain extravasation in normal tissue PDT conditions were one order of magnitude more intensive than the ones in tissue containing neovessels reported in the literature. Material and Methods : Fluorescein isothiocyanate dextran (FITC-D, 2000kDa), a macromolecular agent, was intravenously injected 10 minutes before (LKO group, n=14) or 2 hours (LK2 group, n=16) after Visudyne® mediated PDT in nude mice bearing a dorsal skin fold chamber. Control animals had no PDT (CTRL group, n=8). The extravasation of FITC-D from blood vessels in striated muscle tissue was observed in both groups in real-time for up to 2500 seconds after injection. We also monitored PDT-induced leukocyte rolling in-vivo and assessed, by histology, the corresponding inflammatory reaction score in the dorsal skin fold chambers. Results : In all animals, at the applied PDT conditions, FITC-D extravasation was significantly enhanced in the PDT treated areas as compared to the surrounding non-treated areas (p<0.0001). There was no FITC-D leakage in the control animals. Animals from the LKO group had significantly less FITC-D extravasation than those from the LK2 group (p = 0.0002). In the LKO group FITC-D leakage correlated significantly with the inflammation (p < 0.001). Conclusions: At the selected conditions, Visudyne-mediated PDT promotes vascular leakage and FITC-D extravasation into the interstitial space of normal tissue. The intensity of vascular leakage depends on the time interval between PDT and FITC-D injection. This concept could be used to locally modulate the delivery of macromolecules in vivo. Résumé : La perfusion cytostatique isolée du poumon permet une administration sélective des agents cytostatiques sans implication de la circulation systémique avec une forte accumulation au niveau du poumon mais une faible pénétration dans les tumeurs. La thérapie photodynamique (PDT) qui consiste en l'application d'un sensibilisateur activé par lumière laser non- thermique d'une longueur d'onde définie permet dans certaines conditions, une augmentation de la pénétration des agents cytostatiques macromoléculaires à travers la barrière endothéliale tumorale. Nous avons exploré cet avantage thérapeutique de la PDT dans un modèle expérimental afin d'augmenter d'une manière sélective la pénétration tumorale de la doxorubicin pegylée, liposomal- encapsulée macromoléculaire (Liporubicin). Une tumeur sarcomateuse a été générée au niveau du poumon de rongeur suivie d'administration de Liporubicin, soit par voie intraveineuse soit par perfusion isolée du poumon (ILP). Une partie des animaux ont reçus un prétraitement de la tumeur et du poumon sous jacent par PDT avec Visudyne comme photosensibilisateur. Les résultats ont démontrés que la PDT permet, sous certaines conditions, une augmentation sélective de Liporubicin dans les tumeurs mais pas dans le parenchyme pulmonaire sous jacent. Après administration intraveineuse de Liporubicin et prétraitement par PDT, l'accumulation dans les tumeurs était significative par rapport au poumon, et aux tumeurs sans PDT. Le même phénomène est observé après ILP du poumon. Cependant, les différences avec ou sans PDT n'étaient pas significatives lié à und distribution hétérogène de Liporubicin dans le poumon perfusé après ILP. Dans une deuxième partie de l'expérimentation, nous avons exploré la microscopie intra-vitale pour déterminer l'extravasion des substances macromoléculaires (FITS) à travers la barrière endothéliale avec ou sans Visudyne-PDT au niveau des chambres dorsales des souris nues. Les résultats montrent qu'après PDT, l'extravasion de FITS a été augmentée de manière significative par rapport au tissu non traité. L'intensité de l'extravasion de FITS dépendait également de l'intervalle entre PDT et injection de FITS. En conclusion, les expérimentations montrent que la PDT est capable, sous certaines conditions, d'augmenter de manière significative l'extravasion des macromolécules à travers la barrière endothéliale et leur accumulation dans des tumeurs mais pas dans le parenchyme pulmonaire. Ces résultats permettent une nouvelle perspective de traitement pour des tumeurs superficielles intrathoraciques chimio-résistent comme l'épanchement pleural malin ou le mésothéliome pleural.