Literature DB >> 28516343

Therapeutic dormancy to delay postsurgical glioma recurrence: the past, present and promise of focal hypothermia.

Didier Wion1.   

Abstract

Surgery precedes both radiotherapy and chemotherapy as the first-line therapy for glioma. However, despite multimodal treatment, most glioma patients die from local recurrence in the resection margin. Glioma surgery is inherently lesional, and the response of brain tissue to surgery includes hemostasis, angiogenesis, reactive gliosis and inflammation. Unfortunately, these processes are also associated with tumorigenic side-effects. An increasing amount of evidence indicates that the response to a surgery-related brain injury is hijacked by residual glioma cells and participates in the local regeneration of tumor tissues at the resection margin. Inducing therapeutic hypothermia in the brain has long been used to treat the secondary damage, such as neuroinflammation and edema, that are caused by accidental traumatic brain injuries. There is compelling evidence to suggest that inducing therapeutic hypothermia at the resection margin would delay the local recurrence of glioma by (i) limiting cell proliferation, (ii) disrupting the pathological connection between inflammation and glioma recurrence, and (iii) limiting the consequences of the functional heterogeneity and complexity inherent to the tumor ecosystem. While the global whole-body cooling methods that are currently used to treat stroke in clinical practice may not adequately treat the resection margin, the future lies in implantable focal microcooling devices similar to those under development for the treatment of epilepsy. Preclinical and clinical strategies to evaluate focal hypothermia must be implemented to prevent glioma recurrence in the resection margin. Placing the resection margin in a state of hibernation may potentially provide such a long-awaited therapeutic breakthrough.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dormancy; Glioma; Hypothermia; Recurrence; Resection margin; Surgery; Therapeutic hypothermia

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28516343     DOI: 10.1007/s11060-017-2471-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurooncol        ISSN: 0167-594X            Impact factor:   4.130


  61 in total

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9.  Endovascular Hypothermia in Acute Ischemic Stroke: Pilot Study of Selective Intra-Arterial Cold Saline Infusion.

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Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2016-05-19       Impact factor: 7.914

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2.  Increased ASF1B Expression Correlates With Poor Prognosis in Patients With Gliomas.

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4.  Overexpression of Annexin A2 promotes proliferation by forming a Glypican 1/c-Myc positive feedback loop: prognostic significance in human glioma.

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Review 5.  Current Understanding of Exosomal MicroRNAs in Glioma Immune Regulation and Therapeutic Responses.

Authors:  Jinwu Peng; Qiuju Liang; Zhijie Xu; Yuan Cai; Bi Peng; Jianbo Li; Wenqin Zhang; Fanhua Kang; Qianhui Hong; Yuanliang Yan; Mingyu Zhang
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-01-14       Impact factor: 7.561

  5 in total

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