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Old 09-17-2014, 08:22 AM   #1
Lani
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4,778
rolepaul I know this is not for the here and now

but if it herceptin/pertuzumab etc keep lm mets under control but do not eliminate them (I fervently hope that is not the case) the future may be prevention and/or treatment utilizing a virus:


Neuro Oncol. 2014 Sep 14. pii: nou231. [Epub ahead of print]
Viral infection of implanted meningeal tumors induces antitumor memory T-cells to travel to the brain and eliminate established tumors.
Gao Y, Whitaker-Dowling P, Barmada MA, Basse PH, Bergman I.
Author information

Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Leptomeningeal metastases occur in 2%-5% of patients with breast cancer and have an exceptionally poor prognosis. The blood-brain and blood-meningeal barriers severely inhibit successful chemotherapy. We have developed a straightforward method to induce antitumor memory T-cells using a Her2/neu targeted vesicular stomatitis virus. We sought to determine whether viral infection of meningeal tumor could attract antitumor memory T-cells to eradicate the tumors.
METHODS:
Meningeal implants in mice were studied using treatment trials and analyses of immune cells in the tumors.
RESULTS:
This paper demonstrates that there is a blood-meningeal barrier to bringing therapeutic memory T-cells to meningeal tumors. The barrier can be overcome by viral infection of the tumor. Viral infection of the meningeal tumors followed by memory T-cell transfer resulted in 89% cure of meningeal tumor in 2 different mouse strains. Viral infection produced increased infiltration and proliferation of transferred memory T-cells in the meningeal tumors. Following viral infection, the leukocyte infiltration in meninges and tumor shifted from predominantly macrophages to predominantly T-cells. Finally, this paper shows that successful viral therapy of peritoneal tumors generates memory CD8 T-cells that prevent establishment of tumor in the meninges of these same animals.
CONCLUSIONS:
These results support the hypothesis that a virally based immunization strategy can be used to both prevent and treat meningeal metastases. The meningeal barriers to cancer therapy may be much more permeable to treatment based on cells than treatment based on drugs or molecules.
© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
KEYWORDS:
VSV; blood-meningeal barrier; memory T-cells; meningeal tumor; viral therapy

PMID: 25223975 [
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