Randomized controlled trial validating the use of perispinal etanercept to reduce post-stroke disability has wide-ranging implications
Abstract
Developing effective drug treatments for neurodegenerative disorders has always been hamstrung by the
accepted inability of large molecules (roughly those with a molecular weight greater than 600 Daltons) to cross
the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in therapeutic quantities when administered systemically. The dogma has been
that a simple, noninvasive way to accomplish this goal is not possible with many agents, including biologicals,
because they are too large. Various novel technologies to breach the BBB have been attempted, but with little
success. A randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial (RCT) administering a widely used antitumor necrosis factor (TNF) biological, etanercept, given via perispinal injection, which bypasses the BBB, turns
this dogma on its head. This new trial holds much promise for stroke survivors, as well as having implications for
developing treatments based on other large molecules for this and other brain disorders.
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Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics
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