Leveraging Molecular and Immune-Based Therapies in Leptomeningeal Metastases.
Jessica A WilcoxAdrienne A BoirePublished in: CNS drugs (2022)
Leptomeningeal metastases represent an aggressive stage of cancer with few durable treatment options. Improved understanding of cancer biology, neoplastic reliance on oncogenic driver mutations, and complex immune system interactions have resulted in an explosion in cancer-directed therapy in the last two decades to include small molecule inhibitors and immune checkpoint inhibitors. Most of these therapeutics are underexplored in patients with leptomeningeal metastases, limiting extrapolation of extracranial and even intracranial efficacy outcomes to the unique leptomeningeal space. Further confounding our interpretation of drug activity in the leptomeninges is an incomplete understanding of drug penetration through the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier of the choroid plexus. Nevertheless, a number of retrospective studies and promising prospective trials provide evidence of leptomeningeal activity of several small molecule and immune checkpoint inhibitors and underscore potential areas of further therapeutic development for patients harboring leptomeningeal disease.
Keyphrases
- cerebrospinal fluid
- small molecule
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell
- end stage renal disease
- brain metastases
- chronic kidney disease
- protein protein
- newly diagnosed
- childhood cancer
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- young adults
- ultrasound guided
- drug induced
- weight loss
- risk assessment
- glycemic control
- climate change
- insulin resistance
- patient reported outcomes
- smoking cessation
- replacement therapy