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Neurocirugía

versión impresa ISSN 1130-1473

Neurocirugía vol.18 no.1  feb. 2007

 

 

 

Cerebral blood flow increase in cancer patients by applying cervical spinal cord stimulation

Aumento del flujo cerebral en pacientes con tumores cerebrales y de cabeza y cuello mediante estimulación eléctrica medular cervical

 

 

B. Clavo; F. Robaina; L. Catalá; M. Lloret; B. Pinar; M.A. Caramés; A. Ruiz; A. Cabezón; G. González; P. Lara; E. Ruiz-Egea and M.A. Hernández

Dr. Negrín University Hospital. Las Palmas. (Canary Islands) Spain. (Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery Unit. Research Unit. Dep.Radiation Oncology. Radiology and Medical Physics) and ICIC (Canary Islands Institute for Cancer Research). Las Palmas. Spain.

Correspondence:

 

 


SUMMARY

Introduction. Generally, high-grade gliomas and head and neck tumors have decreased loco-regional blood flow resulting in reduced delivery of chemotherapy and oxygen, as well as an increases in radiation resistance to radiotherapy. The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of cervical spinal cord electrical stimulation (cSCS) on cerebral blood flow in patients with those tumors.
Patients and methods. We have evaluated 27 cancer patients with 12 with high grade gliomas and 15 with advanced head and neck tumors, who had cSCS devices placed after tumor diagnoses and before the commencementinitiating of radio-chemotherapy. They were 12 high grade gliomas and 15 advanced head and neck tumors. Before and after cSCS, cerebral blood flow was assessed bilaterally by transcranial Doppler.
Results. During cSCS there was a significant (p<0.001) increase in systolic (mean >22%) and diastolic (>29%) blood-flow velocities in both, healthy and tumor middle cerebral arteries. The analyses by subgroup of tumors showed similarly significant outcomesfindings.
Conclusions. The results suggest that neuro-stimulationspinal cord electrical stimulation can increase cerebral blood flow in cancer patients. The implication is that this technique could be useful in modifying loco-regional ischemia in brain tumors thus improveing the outcomes of after radio-chemotherapy. Further research is in progress to confirm the advantages of the technique.

Key words: Brain tumors. Cerebral blood flow. Ischemia. Spinal cord stimulation. Transcranial Doppler.


RESUMEN

Introducción. Los gliomas de alto grado y los tumores avanzados de cabeza y cuello generalmente tienen un flujo sanguíneo disminuido. Esto produce una disminución de la llegada de quimioterapia agentes quimioterápicos y oxígeno, lo que lleva a un aumento de la resistencia a la radioterapia y a la quimioterapia. El objetivo de este estudio fue analizar el efecto de la electroestimulación epidural de la médula espinal cervical (EME) sobre el flujo cerebral en pacientes con esos tumores.
Material y métodos. Hemos evaluado 27 pacientes oncológicos portando dispositivos de EME, que fueron colocados después del diagnóstico y antes de empezar el tratamiento con radio-quimioterapia. Se trata de 12 pacientes con gliomas de alto grado y 15 pacientes con tumores avanzados de cabeza y cuello. Antes y después de la EME se determinó bilateralmente el flujo sanguíneo en las arterias cerebrales medias mediante Doppler transcraneal.
Resultados. Durante la EME se produjo un aumento significativo (p<0.001) de la velocidad sistólica (mean media ≥22%) y diastólica (≥29%) del flujo en la arteria cerebral media, tanto del hemisferio ipsilateral al tumor como del hemisferio sano. El análisis por subgrupos de tumores mostró también resultados semejantes.
Discusión. Los resultados sugieren que la EME es capaz de aumentar el flujo sanguíneo cerebral en pacientes oncológicos. La principal implicación de este hallazgo sería su potencial utilidad para modificar la isquemia local y regional de los tumores cerebrales, y así intentar mejorar el efecto de la radioterapia y quimioterapia. Están en marcha estudios adicionales para confirmar los potenciales efectos beneficiosos de la técnica.

Palabras clave: Tumores cerebrales. Flujo cerebral. Isquemia. Estimulación medular. Doppler transcraneal.


 

Introduction

Generally, high-grade gliomas have a decreased loco-regional blood flow, as demonstrated by studies with single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)11 or positron emission tomography (PET)20. Ischemia results in reduced delivery of chemotherapy agents and oxygen. Hypoxic, but viable, tumor cells are up to 2.5-3 times more radio-resistant than well-oxygenated tumor cells10. Additionally, hypoxia can lead to a favored selection of tumor cells that have decreased apoptotic potential9 which, in turn, can result in additional resistance to radiotherapy and chemotherapy.

A meta-analysis22 has demonstrated that modification of tumor hypoxia during radiotherapy can increase improve local tumor control and patient's survival without increasing side effects in some tumors. In patients with malignant gliomas, some encouraging results have been obtained using hyperbaric chambers17 to overcome tumor hypoxia by increasing arterial-blood oxygenation. However, the scarcitylow of the equipment availability and the difficultly of coordinating its use with the patient's radiotherapy schedule reduces the technique's practicability. Vasoactive substances such as nicotinamide are easier to use but have not shown much effectiveness16,21,29 and overcoming loco-regional ischemia in brain tumors remains an unresolved problem. Spinal cord electrical stimulation (SCS) is a neurosurgical technique used successfully for the treatment of ischemic diseases such as vasospastic syndromes24, peripheral vascular disease2 and angina pectoris12. In noncancer patients, cervical-SCS (cSCS) can increase blood perfusion in upper limbs and in head and neck (H&N) tissues as well as improve cerebral blood flow (CBF). Increases in CBF during SCS have been demonstrated by the inhaled 133Xe washout technique14, SPECT15, transcranial Doppler (TCD)19 and PET13. However, except for our own preliminary studies, there have been no investigations on the vascular effect of cSCS in cancer patients.

The aim of this present study was to evaluate the effect cSCS on blood flow in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) measured by transcranial Doppler in a series of cancer patients with carotid artery-dependent tumor blood flow.

 

Material and methods

Patients

We evaluated CBF, using TCD, in 27 cancer patients who had cSCS devices inserted. Patients were 22 males and 5 females with an overall mean age of 53 years (range 26-70 years). The cancers tumors were 12 high grade gliomas and 15 advanced H&N tumors.

TCD was performed after biopsy or surgery and before the commencement initiation of scheduled chemo-radiotherapy. Hemoglobin levels were recorded but not blood pressure, or cardiac parameters or smoking habit. Informed consent was obtained from all patients and the study was approved by the Institutional Ethical Committee.

Cervical spinal cord stimulation

cSCS was delivered via a Medtronic system (Medtronic Neurological, Minneapolis, MN). Atetrapolar electrode was percutaneously inserted under local anesthesia, and placed on the posterior surface of the spinal cord at C2-C4 level, in the epidural space. An external or subcutaneous impulse generator provided an adjustable range of pulse width, intensity and frequency of stimulation. Confirmation of the correct placement of the device was by provoking mild paresthesia in the upper limbs under test stimulation. The parameters of the stimulator were usually set at a voltage of 1-3 V, pulse width of 200 µsec and a pulse frequency rate of 80-100 Hz.

Transcranial Doppler velocimetry

Systolic and diastolic velocities (measured in cm/s) were recorded in both middle cerebral arteries (MCA) by TCD in the trans-temporal approach using a 2 MHz probe from an Angiodine-2 Fluo-Link 300® device (DMS. Montpellier, France). Absence of stenosis was confirmed while the patient was alert, relaxed and seated. The insonation angle was <60º.

In each patient, both TCD studies (pre- and post-cSCS) were performed bilaterally on the same day by the same radiologist to minimize inter-observer variation. TCD examinations were performed pre-cSCS and between 1 and 10 minutes post-cSCS. When an optimal stable flow image was obtained, recordings were made over at least three cardiac cycles. Each assessment was recorded at least three times to preclude operator or technical inaccuracy and the median values were used for subsequent statistical analyses.

Statistical analysis

Statistical tests were applied to the overall patient group as well as the two subsets of patients separately (those with glioma and those with H&N tumor) The two-sided paired t-test was applied when comparing pre- and post-cSCS values. Data are expressed as mean ± SD. Linear correlation was assessed by Pearson's r test. Differences were considered significant at a value of p < 0.05.

 

Results

Following cSCS, in the overall study group, there was a significant increase (p < 0.001) in systolic (Fig. 1) and diastolic (Fig. 2) velocities in the MCA of tumor and healthy MCAcerebral hemispheres. On the tumor side, systolic velocity increased by a mean of 22% (from 81 ± 4 to 98 ± 5 cm/s) and diastolic velocity increased by 29% (from 34 ± 3 to 43 ± 3 cm/s). On the healthy side, systolic velocity increased by a mean of 24% (from 74 ± 4 to 92 ± 4 cm/s) and diastolic velocity increased by 40% (from 30 ± 2 to 42 ± 2 cm/s). Systolic velocity increased in all but one and diastolic velocity in all but four patients.

 


Figure 1. Systolic velocity in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) of cancer patients.
Following cervical spinal cord stimulation (cSCS) the systolic velocity in
MCA in healthy and tumor sides of the patient increased >24% (p < 0.001)
and >22% (p < 0.001), respectively. Error bars show the 95%. Confidence Intervals (95%CI).

 


Figure 2. Diastolic velocity in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) of cancer patients.
Following cervical spinal cord stimulation (cSCS), the diastolic velocity in MCA in healthy
and tumor sides of the patient increased >40% (p < 0.001) and >29% (p < 0.001),
 respectively. Error bars show the 95%. Confidence Intervals (95%CI).

 

Similar results were obtained when both groups of patients were analyzed separately:

In brain cancer patients, the systolic velocity on the tumor side increased by a mean of 19% (p = 0.002) and diastolic velocity increased by 18% (p = 0.002). On the healthy side, systolic velocity increased by a mean of 30% (p < 0.001) and diastolic velocity increased by 48% (p < 0.001). In H&N patients, the systolic velocity on the tumor side increased by a mean of 21% (p = 0.002) and diastolic velocity increased by 26% (p = 0.004). On the healthy side, systolic velocity increased by a mean of 24% (p < 0.001) and diastolic velocity increased by 40% (p < 0.001).

In our group of patients, there were no significant differences in resistance or pulsatility indices following cSCS and neither were there statistically significant correlations between TCD parameters and hemoglobin or hematocrit values.

Mean survival was 46 ± 15 months for grade III and 9 ± 2 months for grade IV tumors.

 

Discussion

The increases of approximately 20% in systolic and diastolic velocities in the MCA following cSCS agree are in keeping with studies using TCD in non-cancer patients19. Our results show a velocity increase in MCA suggesting that cSCS can induces an increase in regional blood flow in cancer patients and which, may potentially, could increase tumor blood flow in brain tumors.

The main limitation of our study is that TCD is not an indirect measurement of blood flow. The TCD technique measures blood flow velocities (cm/s) and velocity could be influenced by changes in the diameter of the vessel. However, cerebral arteries have relatively constant diameters in the course of assessment by TCD. It can be assumed that changes in MCA velocity correlate inversely with changes in vessel resistance and are related to changes in diameter of cerebral arterioles. Hence, TCD changes in MCA velocity should correlate with changes in cerebral blood flow1. The reported 50% increase in blood flow (in ml/min) during cSCS in the common carotid artery agrees with an increased perfusion in the MCA, as has been demonstrated in experimental8 and clinical studies4.

The main hypothesis is that CBF increase could induce improvements in tumor perfusion. This hypothesis is supported by our SPECT-study in high-grade gliomas4 in which, following cSCS, blood flow in brain tumor areas was significantly increased by 15%. This compares favourably with the reported "no-vascular effect" of carbogen breathing + nicotinamide in brain tumors16. This effect of cSCS on tumor blood flow has been reported in another SPECT-based study7.

It may be expected, that an increase in tumor blood flow should results in an increased tumor oxygenation. This is supported by our preliminary report in high grade gliomas using the polarographic probe technique with the Eppendorf device3. The study showed that, during cSCS administration, median pO2 >was significantly increased from 13 to 25 mmHg and the percentage of hypoxic values < 5 mmHg was significantly decreased by 45%. Based on radiobiological principles, the consequence of this effect would be an increased radio-sensitivity of the tissues. In addition, the CBF increase obtained induced by cSCS should improve at least in theory the regional delivery of chemotherapy agents, thus obtaining a higher local effect without increaseding systemic side effects. Special mention needs to be made regarding carmustine implants (Gliadel®) where neuro-stimulation could increase liberation and absorption of carmustine this agent thus with a potentially increasinge in local side effects. However this potential risk effect needs to be confirmed and, in any case, the effect can be prevented -empted by switching-off the cSCS device during the first 3-4 weeks post-carmustine implantation. Changes in tumor blood flow and oxygenation during cSCS could also modify the tumor micro-environment and enhance the effect of some drugs as temozolomide (Temodal®), as supported in our recent preliminary study using PET6. All the abovementioned effects of cSCS augur well for its use in an adjuvant approach in the treatment of brain tumors.

cSCS has a localized segmental vascular effect, particularly in brain, head and neck and upper limbs. Systemic effects are limited or absent and, as suchthus, the "steal effect", can be avoided as well as the side effects resulting from the use of vasoactive drugs such as nicotinamide21,19, can be avoided.

The vascular effects of cSCS can be explained by several mechanisms: sympathicolytic effect18,24,25,26, segmental liberation of vasoactive substances26 and the activation of vasomotor centers in the brainstem23,25 together with a competitive effect with CO2 >on the mechanisms of CBF regulation19. Because of the anatomical and functional abnormalities of tumor blood flow30, mechanisms to explain potential an increase in tumor blood flow increase awaitneed further and, more definitive, research. A possible hypothesis could be that defective self-regulation could preclude opposition to the local blood-flow increases produced by SCS, or that the host vessels in the tumor27 could induce some vessel reaction to the cSCS effect.

The technique of cSCS is minimally invasive and reversible. Following the placement of electrodes, the device can be activated or deactivated at any time over a period of several months, or even years, and can be activated to fit-in with the patient's radiotherapy or chemotherapy schedule. When required, the device can be safely removed.

In the present study, the effect of cSCS oin MCA flow was easily documented by TCD within a few minutes of initiating neuro-stimulation. We have not, as yet, established the optimum stimulation schedule to obtain a maximal effect in tumor blood flow, or oxygenation. Our previous experiences with contact-thermography technique in non-cancer patients24 and in two H&N cancer patients5 showed that up to an hour of stimulation may be necessary to obtain the maximal effect in these tissues. Further studies are needed to optimize the this effect and the impact of cSCS on the survival of patients with brain tumors needs be evaluated.

Patients with high grade gliomas was included in the present study were treated using cSCS as adyuvant technique during the administration application of different radio-chemotherapy schedules. Though we did not observe an increased survival in our patients with high grade gliomas treated with cSCS, we believe that better results could be obtained using cSCS with the newer radio -chemotherapy schemes such as radiotherapy combined with concurrent temozolomide28.

In conclusion, the present study demonstrates that electrical cSCS increases the blood flow in the MCA of both cerebral hemisphers in cancer patients. As supported by previous studies, this regional CBF increase could improve loco-regional delivery of chemotherapy agents, radio-sensitizers and oxygen to brain tumors. The potential usefulness of cSCS as an adjuvant in radio-chemotherapy for high grade brain tumors merits deserves further investigation.

Acknowledgments

We thank all the nurses in the Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery and Chronic Pain Unit for their expertise and dedication. The study was supported, in part, by a grant from the Health and Research Foundation of the Autonomous Government of Canary Islands (Spain): FUNCIS 98-31. Scientific supervision was carried out by GICOR (Grupo de Investigación Clínica en Oncología Radioterápica). Editorial assistance was by Dr. Peter R. Turner of t-SciMed (Reus, Spain).

 

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26. Sánchez-Ledesma, M.J., García-March, G., Goncalves, J., et al.: Role of vasoactive substances in the segmentary vasomotor response following spinal cord stimulation. An experimental study. Stereotact Funct Neurosurg 1990; 54-55: 224-231.        [ Links ]

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Correspondence:
Francisco Robaina, MD, PhD.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery and Chronic Pain Unit.
Dr. Negrín University Hospital.
C/ Barranco la Ballena s/n.
35020 Las Palmas (Canary Islands). Spain.

Recibido: 16-02-06.
Aceptado: 13-03-06

Abreviaturas: CBF: cerebral blood flow. cSCS: cervical-SCS. H&N: head and neck. MCA: middle cerebral artery. PET: emission tomography. SCS: spinal cord electrical stimulation. SPECT: single photon emission computed tomography. TCD: transcranial Doppler

 

 


Comentario al artículo Cerebral blood flow increase in cancer patients by applying cervical spinal cord stimulation de B. Clavo y cols.

 

 

Los autores han observado que la estimulación eléctrica de la médula cervical induce un incremento significativo de la velocidad circulatoria sistólica y diastólica en las arterias cerebrales medias de ambos hemisferios cerebrales en una serie heterogénea de 27 pacientes portadores de gliomas cerebrales de alto grado, o tumores malignos de cabeza y cuello en comparación con el estado basal (previo a la estimulación). Dicho incremento fue similar en los dos subgrupos de pacientes con diferentes tipos de tumor intra o extracerebrales.

El propósito primario del tratamiento con estimulación eléctrica de la médula cervical fue incrementar el flujo local y la liberación de oxígeno en el seno de las neoplasias para hacerlas más susceptibles al tratamiento coadyuvante con quimio-radioterapia. Sin embargo, y como los autores reconocen, el doppler transcraneal determina el flujo cerebral de una manera indirecta y por ello imprecisa, y sus mediciones pueden estar influenciadas por los niveles de presión intracraneal, que aún siendo seguramente normales en el subgrupo de pacientes con tumores extracraneales, pudieron estar elevados en algunos pacientes portadores de gliomas. Por otra parte, la supervivencia media en los pacientes con gliomas fue la comúnmente observada con esta patología en pacientes tratados con quimio-radioterapia sin haber sido sometidos a estimulación de la médula cervical; por otra parte, el curso clínico en los pacientes con tumores de cabeza y cuello no se detalla. En cualquier caso, es casi impensable que el tamaño de la muestra en el presente estudio permitiera demostrar diferencias estadísticamente significativas en la supervivencia en comparación con enfermos tratados convencionalmente.

El lector imagina que el incremento en la velocidad de la circulación en las arterias cerebrales medias inducido por la estimulación eléctrica medular ocurre en el sujeto normal y no es privativa de los pacientes con cualquier tipo de cáncer. Por ello, antes de aplicar esta técnica de bajo riesgo, pero de alto coste, en una población de pacientes con gliomas cerebrales debería demostrarse que verdaderamente induce un incremento en el flujo y la liberación de oxígeno en el seno de los tumores. Además, y lo que es más importante, para demostrar que dicha técnica (cambie el flujo local tumoral en mayor o menor grado) mejora la respuesta terapéutica a la quimio o radioterapia, sería necesario incluir de manera aleatoria casos bien pareados (edad, Karnofski, tipo histológico y tamaño del tumor, grado de citorreducción determinado con RM en el inmediato postoperatorio, etc) en dos grupos suficientemente amplios de pacientes (control y tratado con stimulación medular) que recibieran quimio y radioterapia con protocolos similares y cuyo seguimiento fuera realizado por observadores que desconocieran cuales fueron expuestos al factor intervención (es decir, a estimulación eléctrica crónica de la médula cervical). Desafortunadamente, y como los autores reconocen, parece muy difícil realizar un estudio con un diseño suficientemente apropiado para alcanzar dicho objetivo. En cualquier caso, los autores deben ser alentados a proseguir su investigación para determinar la influencia de la estimulación medular en el flujo y metabolismo de los tumores cerebrales.

R. D. Lobato
Madrid


Respuesta al comentario de R.D. Lobato sobre el artículo Cerebral blood flow increase in cancer patients by applying cervical spinal cord stimulation de B. Clavo y cols.

 

F.J. Robaina Padrón

Recibido: 30-07-06

 

 

Agradecemos al Dr. R.D. Lobato su interés y comentarios respecto a nuestro artículo sobre el efecto de la estimulación de la médula espinal cervical (cSCS) en pacientes oncológicos.

El artículo describe nuestra experiencia con el doppler transcraneal, técnica de valoración no invasiva, relativamente barata y sencilla de realizar (por especialistas entrenados), aunque sujeta a diversas limitaciones. Entre ellas, como muy bien apunta el Dr. R.D. Lobato, en el grupo de pacientes con tumores cerebrales, las condiciones de presión intracraneal elevada y características del lecho vascular tumoral pueden condicionar aumento de los valores basales de la velocidad sistólica y diastólica, sobre todo en el hemisferio afecto. Este efecto se puede evidenciar si comparamos los valores basales (columnas oscuras) de las arterias del lado tumoral con las del lado sano. Pero aquí se podrían sumar otros muchos condicionantes como la localización del tumor, el tipo de cirugía realizada (biopsia-exéresis completa), etc. Por ello nos pareció más relevante centrar la atención en el efecto diferencial pre- post- estimulación donde se puede ver que, tanto en el hemisferio del lado sano como en el del lado tumoral, la velocidad del flujo cerebral aumentaba con independencia del valor basal.

Nuestros estudios sobre cSCS, tanto en tumores cerebrales como en tumores de cabeza y cuello, no estaban diseñados para analizar supervivencia. Un estudio de esas características requiere un diseño y tamaño muestral fuera de nuestro alcance (como se comentará más adelante). Nuestros trabajos estuvieron dirigidos a valorar aspectos fisiopatológicos del efecto de la neuroestimulación sobre la isquemia-hipoxia tumoral, algo que nunca antes se había planteado, y que pudiera servir de base para estudios posteriores más ambiciosos. Hemos mostrado la supervivencia de los pacientes con tumores cerebrales a título orientativo, principalmente para mostrar que el empleo de cSCS no estuvo ligado a un potencial efecto deletéreo imprevisto. De hecho la supervivencia en el grupo de astrocitomas anaplásicos resultó mayor que la experiencia previa en nuestro centro, aunque consideramos que este dato no tiene ningún valor en sí mismo. De hecho, los pacientes con tumores cerebrales, se trataron con distintos esquemas de radioterapia. Cuando empezamos a incluir pacientes, en 1995, se acababa de publicar un estudio randomizado con radioterapia hiperfraccionada (2 dosis al día de 120 cGy) a distintas dosis, que mostraba que la dosis más eficaz en hiperfraccionamiento era la de 72 Gyl. Así, nuestros primeros pacientes se trataron con este esquema de irradiación, hasta que posteriormente se publicó otro ensayo clínico randomizado que no encontró diferencias significativas en supervivencia entre radioterapia hiperfraccionada hasta 72 Gy con radioterapia convencional (1 dosis al día de 200 cGy hasta 60 Gy)2. La quimioterapia empleada fue "tegafur" en los pacientes hiperfraccionados e hydroxiurea en los tratados con radioterapia convencional. Todavía no se había comercializado la temozolomida y nuestro centro sólo disponía de una bomba de Cobalto-60. No se comentó la supervivencia en el grupo de tumores avanzados de cabeza y cuello porque el tamaño muestral también es muy pequeño, y para entender las cifras habría que haber dado aclaraciones sobre sublocalizaciones tumorales y estadiaje tumoral TNM que consideramos que podría quedar fuera del ámbito de este artículo. No obstante, sí cabe comentar, que en el caso de estos tumores, sí se realizó una evaluación (no randomizada) de la supervivencia de los pacientes tratados en un mismo periodo de tiempo, con radioterapia hiperfraccionada +/- "tegafur": 1) de forma exclusiva, 2) con neuroestimulación, 3) con quimioterapia neoadyuvante sin neuroestimulación. En este caso, la supervivencia global del grupo con neuroestimulación fue un 70% mayor que la del grupo con radioquimioterapia exclusiva, y casi el triple que la del grupo que llevó quimioterapia neoadyuvante sin neuroestimulación (datos no publicados, pertenecientes a un proyecto financiado por la Fundación Canaria de Investigación y Salud, FUNCIS 98/31).

Los trabajos realizados por nuestro grupo empleando distintas técnicas, evidencian que la cSCS es capaz de aumentar el flujo sanguíneo y la oxigenación a nivel de tumores con flujo dependiente de las arterias carótidas, con la potencial modificación del microambiente y metabolismo tumoral, véanse las referencias #3-#6 del artículo. Por otra parte, una de las indicaciones de la estimulación de la médula espinal es el tratamiento de síndromes y cuadros isquémicos, entre los que podríamos encuadrar la hipoxiaisquemia tumoral y peritumoral. No obstante, como señala el Dr. R.D. Lobato, la cSCS es una técnica de bajo riesgo, pero de alto coste, y su impacto real como adyuvante oncológico, especialmente en gliomas malignos de alto grado, requiere de estudios bien y específicamente diseñados para valorar supervivencia o al menos impacto en la respuesta al tratamiento o en la calidad de vida. Un ensayo clínico de esas características requeriría un tamaño muestral sólo al alcance de un grupo multicéntrico, y que contara con el adecuado respaldo de la industria, que de momento no acaba de decidirse a apostar por la investigación en este potencial nuevo campo de la neuroestimulación.

Agradecemos mucho las palabras de aliento del Dr. R.D. Lobato a continuar con nuestros estudios. En la actualidad, estamos intentando iniciar nuevos estudios fisiopatológicos con nuevas técnicas para evaluar el efecto de la cSCS sobre la hipoxia, isquemia y metabolismo en gliomas malignos, y también continuamos intentando poner en marcha estudios de evaluación más clínicos. Así: 1) este año hemos comunicado nuestros resultados preliminares sobre la respuesta de astrocitomas de alto grado al tratamiento con radioterapia + temozolomida + cSCS3. Sin embargo, una vez más, el tamaño muestral de nuestro estudio obliga a ser cauto con los resultados, pese a que obtuvimos un porcentaje de respuestas completas y parciales muy superior al descrito por otros autores con el empleo exclusivo de radioterapia + temozolomida. 2) El año pasado, durante el 14th Meeting of the World Society for Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery (WSSFN) (Roma, 2005), se realizó un Workshop especial titulado "Neuromodulation of cerebral blood flow: Implications in brain tumor therapy", y tuvimos la oportunidad de contactar con varios centros italianos que podrían estar interesados en participar en un estudio multicéntrico al respecto. Si algún día finalmente se pusiera en marcha un ensayo clínico fase III, esperamos que la participación de centros españoles no sea meramente testimonial.

 

Bibliografía

1. Murray, K.J., Nelson, D.F., Scott, C., et al.: Qualityadjusted survival analysis of malignant glioma. Patients treated with twice-daily radiation (RT) and carmustine: a report of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) 83-02. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1995; 31: 453-459.

2. Scott, C., Curran, W., Yung, W., et al.: Long term results of RTOG 90-06: a randomized trial of hyperfractionated radiotherapy (RT) to 72.0 Gy and carmustine vs. standard RT and carmustine for malignant glioma patients with emphasis on anaplastic astrocytoma (AA) patients. J Clin Oncol 1998; 384 (abstract).

3. Clavo, B., Robaina, F., Cabezón, A., et al.: Electrical spinal cord stimulation during radiotherapy and temozolomide in high grade gliomas. A phase II report. Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol (ASCO). J Clin Oncol 2006; 24: 11510 (abstract).

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