| Literature DB >> 24445258 |
Shruti V Kabadi1, Alan I Faden2.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces secondary biochemical changes that contribute to delayed neuroinflammation, neuronal cell death, and neurological dysfunction. Attenuating such secondary injury has provided the conceptual basis for neuroprotective treatments. Despite strong experimental data, more than 30 clinical trials of neuroprotection in TBI patients have failed. In part, these failures likely reflect methodological differences between the clinical and animal studies, as well as inadequate pre-clinical evaluation and/or trial design problems. However, recent changes in experimental approach and advances in clinical trial methodology have raised the potential for successful clinical translation. Here we critically analyze the current limitations and translational opportunities for developing successful neuroprotective therapies for TBI.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24445258 PMCID: PMC3907865 DOI: 10.3390/ijms15011216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Translational challenges and corrective recommendations.
| Translational (preclinical & clinical) challenges | Recommended corrective measures |
|---|---|
| The diversity and complexity of secondary injury mechanisms | Better elucidating secondary injury mechanisms including diversity of cell death mechanisms and interactions |
| Inconsistency and inaccuracy of clinical outcome measures and biomarkers | Development of a more comprehensive and symptom-based classification for evaluation of specific behavioral outcomes, quality of life, physiological and imaging-based biomarkers |
| Variable experimental factors such as multiple injury models of different injury severity, species, strains, genders, ages | Evaluation of potential neuroprotective therapies in multiple TBI models, different strains and species—including higher gyrancephalic species, both genders and young |
| Lack of clinically-relevant behavioral outcomes under pre-clinical settings | Use of well-characterized behavioral and histological outcome measures to assess long-term effects of the treatment |
| Limited preclinical pharmacological evaluation | Examination of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and brain concentration of the proposed treatment |
| Inadequate therapeutic window data | Performing therapeutic window studies for prospective neuroprotective treatments to include a more delayed clinically-relevant time points of administration |
| Inconsistency in statistical modeling/methodologies and inadequate sample sizes | Reducing discrepancies in research methodology between animal and clinical trials, enlargement of sample sizes and use of adaptive design to improve power |
Multipotential novel neuroprotective strategies for TBI.
| Emerging neuroprotective approaches | Mechanisms of action/neuroprotective effects |
|---|---|
| Progesterone | Attenuates glutamate excitotoxicity [ |
| Thyrotropin-releasing Hormone | Increases cerebral blood flow and metabolism; attenuates peptidyl leukotrienes, platelet-activation factor, endogenous opioids and glutamate [ |
| Erythropoietin | Limits excitotoxic, pro-oxidant, edematous, and inflammatory effects [ |
| Hypothermia | Reduces contusion volume and improves functional outcomes in experimental TBI [ |
| Diketopiperazines | Attenuates cell cycle, calpain, cathepsin; increases BDNF, HSP 70 [ |
| SUR1-regulated NCCa-ATP Channel Inhibitors (glibenclamide) | Reduces edema, secondary hemorrhage, inflammation, apoptosis and lesion size [ |
| Statins (rosuvastatin and atorvastatin) | Reduces IL-6, TNF-α, and ICAM-1, glial cell activation and cerebral edema, and restores blood-brain barrier integrity [ |
| Cyclosporin A | Preservation of mitochondrial function, inhibition of lipid peroxidation and oxidative stress [ |
| Substance P (SP) Antagonists | Reduced inflammation and maintenance of blood-brain barrier integrity [ |
| Cell Cycle Inhibitors | Inhibition of cell cycle activation, neurodegeneration and chronic neuroinflammation microglial and astrocyte activation [ |
| Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor-5 Agonists (CHPG) | Reduces expression of inducible nitric-oxide synthase, production of nitric oxide and TNF-α, and intracellular generation of reactive oxygen species, limits caspase dependent apoptosis [ |
| Combined inhibition of multiple cell death pathways (e.g., HSP 70) | Limiting both caspase–dependent and caspase-independent cell death [ |
| Non-pharmacological approaches such as delayed initiation of exercise | Attenuates classical inflammatory pathways, activation of alternative inflammatory responses and enhancement of neurogenesis, increases BDNF [ |