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Published in: CNS Drugs 2/2011

01-02-2011 | Short Communication

Rapid Improvement of Chronic Stroke Deficits after Perispinal Etanercept

Three Consecutive Cases

Author: Edward Tobinick

Published in: CNS Drugs | Issue 2/2011

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Abstract

Background: Thrombolytic therapy reduces stroke size and disability by reperfusion and salvage of ischaemic penumbra. Emerging evidence suggests that retrieved penumbra may be the site of ongoing inflammatory pathology that includes extensive microglial activation. Microglial activation may be associated with excessive levels of tumour necrosis factor (TNF) and resultant neurotoxicity. Etanercept, a potent biologic TNF antagonist, reduces microglial activation in experimental models and has been therapeutically effective in models of brain and neuronal injury. Perispinal administration of etanercept, previously reported to be beneficial for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, may facilitate delivery of etanercept into the brain.
Objective: The objective of this report is to document the initial clinical response to perispinal etanercept in the first chronic stroke cohort so treated.
Methods: Three consecutive patients with stable and persistent chronic neurological deficits due to strokes that had failed to resolve despite previous treatment and rehabilitation were evaluated at an outpatient clinic. They were treated off-label with perispinal etanercept as part of the clinic’s practice of medicine.
Results: All three patients had chronic hemiparesis, in addition to other stroke deficits. Their stroke distributions were right middle cerebral artery (MCA), brainstem (medulla) and left MCA. The two patients with MCA strokes had both received acute thrombolytic therapy. Each of the three patients was treated with an initial dose of perispinal etanercept 13, 35 and 36 months following their acute stroke, respectively. Significant clinical improvement following perispinal etanercept administration was observed in all patients. Onset of clinical response was evident within 10 minutes of perispinal injection in all patients. Improvements in hemiparesis, gait, hand function, hemi-sensory deficits, spatial perception, speech, cognition and behaviour were noted among the patients treated. Each patient received a second perispinal etanercept dose at 22–26 days after the first dose that was followed by additional clinical improvement.
Conclusions: Open-label administration of perispinal etanercept resulted in rapid neurological improvement in three consecutive patients with chronic neurological dysfunction due to strokes occurring 13–36 months earlier. These results suggest that stroke may result in chronic TNF-mediated pathophysiology that may be amenable to therapeutic intervention long after the acute event. Randomized clinical trials of perispinal etanercept for selected patients with chronic neurological dysfunction following stroke are indicated.
Footnotes
1
for example, rapid improvement of gait years after stroke has not been reported. Initial walking function is impaired in the majority of patients with acute stroke, with recovery of function occurring mainly in the first 6 months.34,38,39 In a prospective study of 804 consecutive acute stroke patients, recovery of walking function within the first 11 weeks after stroke occurred in 95% of patients.38
 
2
Evidence of expression of the gene encoding the p55 TNF receptor has been documented in the choroid plexus, ependymal cells, median eminence and paraventricular nucleus of the rat.42
 
3
The rapid clinical response, beginning within minutes, suggests that the location of this inflammatory pathology may include not only the peri-infarct inflammatory penumbra but also periventricular regions directly in contact with the CSF, such as the choroid plexus.21
 
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Metadata
Title
Rapid Improvement of Chronic Stroke Deficits after Perispinal Etanercept
Three Consecutive Cases
Author
Edward Tobinick
Publication date
01-02-2011
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
CNS Drugs / Issue 2/2011
Print ISSN: 1172-7047
Electronic ISSN: 1179-1934
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2165/11588400-000000000-00000

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