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Experimental Studies of the Blood-Brain DAVID Laboratory of Chemical Pharmacology, National P. Cancer Barrier RALL Institute, National In.stitutes of Health , Bethe8da , Maryland SUMMARY The problems agents associated in l)articular into with the entry the brain and of drugs in general cerebrospinal fluid have and anti-leukemic been considered. Technics which might allow more drug to enter the central nervous system have been discussed and their limitations noted. A new method of ventriculolumbar perfusion has been described which may offer increased therapeutic effectiveness. The malignant cells of acute leukemia enjoy unusual prerogatives in their battle against successful chemother apy. Like guerrilla forces in jungle warfare, these cells Thus the cells must be eradicated. Although other possi bilities might be considered, optimal chemotherapy must destroy all leukemic cells everywhere. possess hidden sanctuaries into which the attackers can How may this be done? Dr. Thomas in the preceding not penetrate. And in these pharmacologic sanctuaries article (22) has most beautifully demonstrated 1 pharma they can, if not completely annihilated, regroup and mul cologic sanctuary for leukemia cells, and has indicated the tiply. One such sanctuary, as suggested by the title of difficulties inherent in conventional chemotherapy. It is this l)aper, lies within the central nervous system (CNS). the purpose of this communication to consider the reasons Before considering the problems of eradicating the leu why conventional agents penetrate poorly into brain and kemic cells ill these areas, it is pertinent to consider cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and to suggest possible methods whether this effort is necessary. How much will be of attack upon these pharmacologically sequestered cells. gained if the effort is successful? Leukemia may develop Perhaps, with the advent of the nitrosoureas, this is less from a single, essentially nonrepetitive event ; alterna necessary. These agents, small molecules, nonionized at tively, it may develop repetitively from a continuing body pH, and highly lipoid-soluble, can cure murmne me process, such as a persistent viral infection. In the first ningeal leukemia (19). They can do this for two reasons. instance the relapse that follows clinical remission is clear They are intrinsically potent anti-leukemic agents, and evidence that the chemotherapy failed to eradicate all they P0S5C5Sthe physicochemical properties which permit leukemic cells. The duration of remission may represent free and rapid passage from blood stream into brain and the period of time necessary for the redevelopment of a CSF. Perhaps by the time this is published, a nitro sufficient leukemic population to cause overt disease from sourea will have been shown to cure meningeal leukemia the few cells spared from the chemotherapy. In the in man. In any event, the story of the recent research second instance the period of remission might be either leading to a fairly complete understanding of the blood the time necessary for reinduction if all the leukemic cells brain and blood-CSF barrier is interesting enough to had been eradicated, or the time for redevelopment if leu stand by itself, unbuttressed by practical application. kemic cells remained after chemotherapy. Further, the problems raised by the passage of drugs It is clear that in the first instance the @)harmacolOg1C through these barriers are in many ways common to drug asylum offered in such areas as the CNS can be of critical passage into many other tissues and into cells in general importance. In the extreme example, if only 1 cell (9, 14, 20). Although we have mentioned the blood-brain and blood remains in the CNS after chemotherapy, florid systemic CSF barriers, it should be clear that we are dealing with leukemia will develop in time. In the 2nd instance, how ever, is the pharmacologic sanctuary of critical impor a 3-component system (Chart 1), which includes the CSF tance? I think it is. If all the systemic cells and all the brain barrier. The locus of the blood-brain barrier prob ably is the tightly packed sheath of glial and neuronal viruses are eradicated, the disease will be cured. But if cells or virus remain within the CNS, or anywhere else, cells which completely surrounds the brain capillary. The they will multiply and repopulate the body and lead to blood-CSF barrier is predominantly the choroid plexus, a florid leukemia. The 1st step to the cure of leukemia, solid sheet of epithelial secretory cells between the rich then, is the eradication of all leukemic cells. If this is not choroidal blood supply and the cerebrospinal fluid. The ependyma separates CSF from brain tissue. Recent sufficient, then the initiator, or virus, must be eradicated. Whether the leukemic cells or constant viral reinfection is evidence suggests that this is less of a solid cellular bar ncr than the others. the continuing cause of leukemia, the cells, if we trust animal systems, have the pcwer to continue the disease. None of these barriers is absolute. No substance I 1572 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 15, 2017. © 1965 American Association for Cancer Research. RALL—Experimental BL Studies of the Blood-Brain Barrier 1573 TABLE 1 0 0 D ENTRY OF TYPICAL DRUGS INTO CEREBROSPINAL FLUID IN MANa DrugNonionized, (mm)Antipyrine BRAIN CSF:plasma for entry pH 7.4 (%)Liooid solubilitySteady ratioHalf-time Sulfadiazine 10 0.01High p-Aminohippurate100 CHART 1.—Equilibrium via the various barriers a Data know of is absolutely excluded from brain or CSF when present in the blood. For albumin the ratio is something substances Perhaps is the entry through in small imperfections or these membrane systems, or through in the brain that do not possess the around the capillaries, permeability. amounts minute of such lesions in the few small areas encircling glial cells and do not possess any selective Compounds could enter into brain and CSF through the area postrema, the subforical body, and other such areas. The characteristics that determine the entry of com pounds into brain and CSF are similar, and these will be treated together. The available routes of exit from brain and CSF are different, however, and these will be treated separately. The key to the entry of compounds into the CNS is the solid cellular barriers that must be traversed. The characteristics that chemical compounds must possess to diffuse rapidly through lipoid-like cell membranes are well known. For easy penetration by diffusion a drug must be lipoid-soluble and nonionized and should not be bound to I)lasma proteins or other nondiffusible constit uents. The entry of 3 types of substances into CSF will illustrate this (10, 13). The drugs, their physicochemical characteristics, and their entry into CSF in man are shown in Table 1. Patients with malignant Blood diseases but was sampled and CSF was sampled space through no demonstrable from a peripheral from the lumbar an indwelling catheter. It is clear that antipyrine coneen for protein binding reaches a CSF : plasma concentration ratio of unity. This is typical drugs. CSF slowly, less lipoid-soluble and the steady than unity. state The Sulfadiazine CSF : plasma slowness of ratio entry is related to the low degree of lipoid solubility. The explana tion of the failures of the CSF : plasma ratio to reach unity has led to the discovery of interesting ways in which the concentration of certain drugs within the CSF and brain can be altered by altering the physiologic state of the organism. Low1 0.260 It is also an example of how passive diffusion can lead to an apparent concentration gradient across a membrane. The key fact necessary to explain the un equal distribution of sulfadiazine is that there is a pH gradient between amounts to about 0.05 pH unit. CSF and blood (13). Normally Sulfadiazine 300 at body this is partially (10). pH, and the blood-CSF barrier is perme able to nonionized sulfadiazine; it is not permeable to the ionized drug. The fraction ionized on each side of the membrane is determined by the pH on each side. On the side with the lower pH there will be less total drug (ion ized and un-ionized) because a greater fraction of the drug will be nonionized. This is illustrated in Chart 2. The CSF and plasma pH were chosen for arithmetic simplicity and are unrealistic. By altering the acid-base balance of the animal it is possible to abolish this gradient, or to accentuate and re verse it. This offers an opportunity to test this hypothesis of nonionic diffusion between CSF and blood. These studies were performed in dogs, as detailed above. Aci dosis and alkalosis induced by primary alterations in pCO2 abolish the pH gradient. Infusion of HC1, however, lowers blood pH but leaves CSF pH unchanged or raises it slightly. Infusion of NaOH raises blood pH, and CSF pH either falls slightly or is unaffected.' Table 2 shows the effects of such pH alterations on the distribution of sulfadiazine. Clearly the distribution of this weak acid is profoundly and The almost predictably complete p-aminohippurate can mechanisms. virtually affected exclusion be explained First, completely by readily. That drug gradients. on the such as basis of 3 and most obviously, ionized which pH of compounds and does they lipoid-insoluble body pH and thus cannot diffuse through diffuse at cell membranes into the CSF is removed by the fairly rapid bulk flow. The iresence of bulk flow of CSF is a point of difference between the exit of compounds from brain and CSF. It is not generally realized that CSF is produced and returned to the blood stream and of nonionized, enters vein, the CSF rapidly enters ionized are subarachnoid Plasma trations of the drugs were corrected and plasma water content. is significantly from Rall different CNS disease were studied. A constant plasma concen tration of the drug was established and maintained by i.v. infusion. .0 0.8 of the 3-com ponent system: blood-brain, blood-CSF, and brain-CSF. like 400 : 1 . Low CSF at the rate through the brain so-called a brisk rate. In an adult, CSF is produced at of 0.5 ml/min, and most of this, after flowing the ventricular system and around the surface of and cord, exits via either the arachnoid villi, the valves of the CSF, or out the cranial or spinal nerve roots (9, 14, 20) . The final ratio of an ionized drug between blood and CSF is a function of the relationship between the net inflow rate of the drug and the outflow rate of CSF. Also, it is now clear that some organic acids and bases are actively pumped out of the CSF (8). A 1 CSF pH either shifts paradoxically or is unaffected for the following reasons: CO2 rapidly diffuses between blood and CSF; bicarbonate does so very slowly. In metabolic acidosis, there fore, the compensatory CSF pCO2. However, hyperventilation CSF bicarbonate, will lower arterial and unlike blood bicarbon ate, will remain unchanged and a slight increase in pH often oc curs (16). Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 15, 2017. © 1965 American Association for Cancer Research. 1574 Cancer CSF pH 7.5 0% 90 % IONIZED @ Vol. 25, October 1965 Research UN-IONIZED I TOTAL DRUG CONC. 200j.eg/ml @— MEMBRANE TOTAL DRUG CONC 100.eq/ml [@ @— 80% IONIZED 20% UN-IONIZED BLOOD pH 6.9 % Un—ionized Drug Conc. Total Drug CSF (2OOj.@g/mI) Rc@f CHART 2.—Ilypothetical TABLE EFFECT OF @HGRADIENTS SULFADIAZINE steady-state distribution = 2.0 - CSF(lO) of sulfadiazine (pKa 6.5). TABLE 3 2 ON DISTRIBUTION BETWEEN p1 (20) % Un—ionized Drug .%c@s@1 Conc.Total Drug pt (100.oj/mI) CSF DIFFUSION OF IN AN AQUEOUS MEDIUM AT 37°C OF INULIN, SUCROSE, UREA, AND THO AND PLASMAa PHCSF:PLAsM.@ OF POINTOF 50% CONCENTRATION (mm)lhr4hr24hrTHO SULFADIAZINEBlOOdCSF•@RATIONormal SUBSTANCEDIFFUSION CONSTANT X 10@ (sq cm/sec)DISPLACEMENT Metabolic Metabolic acidosis alkalosis Respiratory acidosis7.39 a Summary mechanism 1.3 0.6 7.10 7.36 +0.26 7.62 7.34 —0.28 7.04—0.07 7.037.32 0.0150.8 of experiments similar to that tubule exists and probably 0.9 the This exhibits saturation compounds CSF to the present in the proximal renal is located in the choroid plexus blood. competition kinetics, up air Like other phenomena, metabolic arid of course the ability electrochemical pumps stereospecificity, to move gradient. With a considerationi of these 3 types of compounds we have briefly explored the factors influencing the entry of drugs into CSF and brain. If a drug is lipoid-soluble and un-ionized it is very likely to enter without difficulty. Partially ionized compounds may be affected by the exist ence of l)H gradients. Ionization tends to decrease their rate of entry and render them susceptible to being flushed out of the CSF by bulk flow. In addition, an active trans port mechanism exists which pumps- certain organic dcc trolytes from CSF to blood. In these latter 2 respects the situation with brain differs from CSF. Bulk flow does not occur in brain, nor have active transport mechanisms been demonstrated which remove compounds from brain itself. The relationship between CSF and brain is interesting, and only now is beginning to be explored. The ependyma separating brain tissue 1.7 0.7 0.23.2 4.7 3.0 1.615.9 2.4 1.5 0.86.5 11.6 7.4 4.0 in dogs from Rail et al. (13). of the 4th ventricle. This processmoves certain chemicals from Urea Sucrose Inulin3.2 from ventricular CSF and the pia glia separating brain from subarachnoid CSF are a less solid cellular barrier than the others. Inulin, for example, is a large lipoid-insoluble molecule which cannot enter brain or CSF, but it moves fairly freely from CSF into the extracellular space of brain (11). Similarly, bromphenol blue (3) and acetazolamide (18) are able to enter brain, presumably the extracellular area from CSF. The con cept that substances such as these can move freely between brain and CSF has certain physiologic and pharmacologic implications over and above those concerned with nutri tion of neurons and glia. While the CSF has 2 specialized mechanisms by which it can be cleared of compounds, brain has none. Consider a 2-compartment system in which diffusion alone is the mechanism by which a drug moves from 1 compartment to the other. Place a drug which diffuses very slowly across this membrane in 1 of the compartments. In a totally stagnant system, a system in which there is no bulk flow in either compartment, this drug, if given time, will move until there is no electrochemical gradient between the 2 sides. So it should to occur through active removal be in brain. Bulk flow does not seem the brain, nor is there evidence for any of compounds from the brain. Experi mental evidence, however, does indicate that many com pounds do not—even if given time—equilibrate between blood and brain. Must we invoke unproved, ubiquitous, and nonspecific active removal mechanisms, or are there other explanations? I would like to suggest that it is feasi ble for such compounds to diffuse out of the brain sub stance and into the CSF where they may be removed either by bulk flow—which is, after all, energy-requiring—or by active transport. It is clear that mum and other large, lipoid-insoluble molecules are free to diffuse into the brain from the CSF. Although diffusion is a slow process, after 3—4hr the 1st 5 mm of brain tissue adjacent to the CSF will have a concen Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 15, 2017. © 1965 American Association for Cancer Research. RALL—Experimental Studies of the Blood-Brain we have a system not very dissimilar from ENTRY in the CSF. One is nonspecific organic electrolytes from bulk flow of CSF. mechanism the characteristic of this steroid. needed concerning CSF and brain. No information vincristine into Clearly would suggest more information is the entry of this and other steroids into is available CSF . howei er, is that or concerning brain. The it does not affect AS A FUNCTION 0.6 2.0 6.40.10 2 4 80.1 a Data that steroids should enter to a much greater extent, it was assumed that this reflected the high degree of plasma pro tein binding CSF OF concentration ms)CSF: concentration plasma1 (mM)CSF Plasma The CSF. physicochemical INTO CONCENTRATIONa 0.30 0.50 0.8 that removes weak What is known concerning the entry of the known anti leukemic drugs into CSF and brain? Methotrexate (MTX) is the best studied, and it is clear that a CSF: plasma ratio of less than 0.05 is obtained (15, 23, 24). This is explainable since MTX is a lipoid-insoluble, moderately strong acid, and is protein-bound to about 50 % in plasma. 6-Mercaptopurine (6-MP) also fails to enter CSF to any great extent (5, 6). This appears to be the result of the rapid degradation and elimination of 6-MP rather than a primary difficulty in penetration. In experiments in which massive lethal i.v. infusions of 6-MP were given to dogs, the CSF : plasma ratios ap proached 0.5; normally they are much less (6). The steroids have been studied only to a very limited extent. Dr. Walter Oppelt and I have shown that some what less than 10 % of the plasma concentration of radio labeled hydrocortisone enters CSF in dogs or in man. Since OF THIOCYANATE PLASMA a typical cell with lipoid-like membranes. Lipoid solubil ity and nonionization favor entry into a typical cell or the brain or CSF. Specialized removal mechanisms are found other is the active transport 1575 TABLE 4 tration about 5 % of that in CSF. Inulin and similar comj)ounds diffuse across the brain capillaries very slowly, much more slowly than these compounds can diffuse into the extracellular space of the brain (Table 3).2 In brief, then, Barrier the entry clinical of impression, meningeal from Methylglyoxal-bis-guaiiylhydrazone appears to enter brain and CSF only to a very limited extent (7). No data exist concerning the entry of cyclophosphamide into brain or CSF. The failure of these major anti-leukernic agents to enter brain and CSF, then, aids in the explanationi of the in creased interest in meningeal leukemia, both as a clinical entity and as a therapeutic and pharmacologic problem. et a!. (21). them some degree of toxic specificity. Perhaps the protean toxicity of the nitrosoureas is a reflection of this. Altering the acid-base state of the body can force drugs into brain and CSF. Consider a weak acid like metho trexate. In a situation with a metabolic acidosis in which the blood pH is lower than CSF pH, the gradient forcing this drug into CSF becomes steeper and more drug should enter. Acetazolamide, a carbonic anhydra.se inhibitor, will also tend to lower blood pH ; in addition, it will slow the rate of CSF production and, therefore, the bulk flow of CSF. Thus the rate of removal of CSF and of met-ho trexate is decreased. This is a delicate situation, however. These same forces will tend to drive MTX into other cells and other areas as well. Unusual manifestations of toxic ity might result. Further, this will alkalinize the urine and increase the rate of renal excretion of MTX, and the whole l)[email protected] of the agent will be changed. Ex perimentation alone will show this to be better therapy or worse. Some evidence exists that MTX specifically and organic electrolytes in general are actively removed from the CSF. Parenteral administration of a competing electrolyte might block the active removal of MTX. Again, the total phar macology leukemia. Streicher active might renal also excretion be changed, will be since similarly any element blocked arid of l)la.sma concentrations arid excretory rate will be altered. The dose schedule also can influenice the penetration of a drug into CSF and brain, if the drug is susceptible to active removal from the CSF. High dosages will saturate the active transport system, arid the over-all removal will If 1 or more of these highly active agents were able to enter therefore be less. An example is found (21) on the entry of thiocyanate, which is actively removed, into the CSF (Table 4). Intermittent dose schedules, or short intensive course CSF and effectively schedules, inges, this problem eradicate How can meningeal facts just presented, adequate treatment leukemic would hardly leukemia cells on the men exist today. be treated? with proportionally Given the A different higher sort of systemic how can we use them to allow the of meningeal leukemic cells and other mia in an attempt neoplastic cells sequestered within the CNS? One approach is to find or develop drugs which are lipoid-soluble and un-ionized. That this is a promising field is shown by the nitrosoureas. It is possible, how ever, that the ubiquity of their distribution may deny increased amounts hypothermia (1). eluded from brain. 2 This allows one to estimate the extracellular space in brain. It turns out to be about 10—15% in normal animals, but interest ingly it is 5% in dead animals. This suggests that at death the neuronal and/or glial cells swell and imbibe the extracellular water. This may account for the electron microscopic picture of brain tissue. brain barrier. important, but doses, might approach might utilized to force compounds Recent to allow studies have hypother past the blood suggested that of penicillin enter brain tissue during Penicillin, like MTX, is normally cx This area of research is intriguing and it is not yet ready for These are some of the potential that be expected more drug to enter the CNS. be employed to increase practical application. pharmacologic the entry devices of drugs into CSF and brain. They are applicable only to certain kinds of agents, such as weak organic electrolytes, and, in par ticular, organic acids. In quantitative terms, they might not be expected to more than double the CSF : plasma drug Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 15, 2017. © 1965 American Association for Cancer Research. Cancer Research 1576 Inflow System Vol. 25, October 1965 TABLE 5 Outflow System DOSAGE OF METHOTREXATE FOR VENTRICULOLUMBAB Toxic limitationsLocal (dog)°Convulsive, Pressure determined by height of outflow tube 1 mg/ml in cisternal CSF (0.1-0.2 mg/mI in yen tricle)Systemic dose, 0.5—1.0mg/kg (man)Tolerated daysPerfusion every 4 mg/ml, concentration0.01—0.02 hrTotal CHART 3.—Block concentration diagram ratio. of the drug ministration of ventriculolunibar Generally really effective therapy. The other alternative cation a From ii Cord this to the inadequate for of drugs meninges. cells within administration the seems is administered The intrathecal ad sac of methotrexate from the brain subarachnoid was in and space to be the volume (17). the treatment, (12—iS) Even with meninges. after lumbar in which the drug attention to this, careful as with the National Cancer Institute just reported by Dr. Thomas, fails to eradicate kemic cells and is only symptomatic. series the leu Rate Volume 3.75, then 1.5 mI/mm 450ml Concentration MTXb Rate Volume the animal Pressure Concent rat ion Calculated values CSF production Inulin clearance MTX clearance a Perfusion b MTX, technic (8) to the leukemic is simple. CSF is PumPed from a cannula in 1 location, lateral ventricle, to a cannula in another cisterna magna diagram in Chart operational pressure or lumbar 3. sac. i.e., This The outflow characteristics is low, of the below the system. normal generally location, is shown pressure Synthetic in a block determines If the CSF the the the outflow pressure, most Diseases procedure. more widely distri buted. In fact it is possible that water and sonic of the solutes might move into the brain. Those constituents, which can do so, will move across ependyma, the extracellular space in brain, and exit across the capil lanes into the blood stream. Others, such as mum or methotrexate, may tend to be concentrated in the super (ventricular varying the inflow rate, is theoretically possible and cortical) or the brain. By outflow pressure, and elevation, it to deposit the drug very widely within the CNS adjacent to the CSF. If an adequate concentration of the drug is presented, the cells free in the subarachnoid space will be effectively treated. The layers and clumps of cells will be treated if time is allowed for the 226 @g/ml 0.45 ml/min 1.3 mi/mm 1.9 mi/mm was done for 240 mm. the centrum of the time even though and Blindness these areas have Diffusion is slow, however, and required can be seen in Table 3. for a specific compound, In collaboration with Dr. Institute of Neurological and Dr. Henderson of the National This was a 10-year-old boy with acute lym phatic leukemia, who was in systemic remission but had meningeal leukemia. The details of the 1)erfusion are during will become @g/ml ; inulin Cancer Institute, we have performed 6 such perfusions in 3 patients. The 1st patient will be used to illustrate the given and the solution 10 Some dosage considerations MTX, are shown in Table 5. Edgar Bering of the National channels, ficial layers WITH methotrexate. not I)enetrate of the infused synthetic CSF as well as the normally formed CSF will appear in the outflow. As the outflow pressure is increased, more and more will follow the normal outflow such as water, (17). 0.3—1.0mI/mm 125ml 90—iSO mm H2O MTX 2.9—4.4pig/mI; inulin 150—206@sg/ ml some notion the experimental prmciple al. Outflow inward diffusion of drug. In et Inflow perfusion child. Rieselbach VENTRICULOLUMBAR PERFUSION IN A 10-YEAR-OLD Bo@ ACUTE LYMPHOCYT1C LEUKEMIA WITH MENINGEAL The problem is one of getting the drug in the right place in the right concentration. One approach to this that we have attempted was to adapt the j)rocedure of ventricular from and the direct appli The reasons for this seem to be the low concentration of the drug in many of the crevices and crannies of the sub arachnoid space. The major factor affecting the distribu tion co-workers TABLE 6 troduced by the group at Memorial Hospital (23, 24) and this form of treatment produces excellent symptomatic control. However, u.s Dr. Thomas has shown, it fails to leukemic and LEUKEMIAa is local therapy, into the lumbar eradicate Rail mg perfusion. is 1.2—5ml/min, for 2—4 dose5—15 NerveRoots PERFUSION in Table 6. He experienced the perfusion, It is impossible, nausea but otherwise so far, to estimate the therapeutic of these perfusions. Thus a subarachnoid an acflve agent offers 1 other approach eradication of leukemic cells in the CNS. I have discussed and retching was a.symptomatic. effects perfusion with to the possible in detail a major area of pharmacologic asylum. But it should be clear that there may be other areas iii which neopla.stic cells may find a sanctuary, such as the thymus, or the testes, or even neoplastic growths themselves. There is an inadequate blood supply in the interior of large tumors. It has recently been shown that there is a limitation to the entry of even tritiated water to the center of transplanted tumors (21). Dyes slowly enter and exit from the pericentral area of some tumors, and do Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 15, 2017. © 1965 American Association for Cancer Research. RALL—Experimental been shown to contain viable cells (4). it would be to eradicate Studies of the Blood-Brain 12. Rail, How unfortunate system. 1. Baldwin, M., Farrier, R., MacDonald, F., and Ommaya, A. K. Cerebral I)isposition of Drugs at Low Temperatures. J. Nets rosurg., 20: 637-46, 1963. F. K., Harris, A. It., Berlin, N. I., and White, J. Water Exchange in Animal and Human Tumors. J. Appi. Physiol., 16: 181—85,1961. 3. Domek, N. S., Barlow, C. F., and Roth, L. J. An Ontogenetic Study of Phenobarbitai-C'4 in Cat Brain. J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 150: 285-93, sues. J. Physiol., 150: 451—62, 1960. 5. Goldacre, R. J., and Sylven, B. On the Access of Blood-borne to Various Tumour Regions. Brit. J. Cancer, 16: 306—22, Ventricular System. Life Sci., No. 2, pp. 43—48,1962. 13. Rail, D. P., Rieselbach, R. E., Oliverio, V. T., and Morse, E. E. Pharmacology of Folic Acid Antagonists as Related to Brain and CSF. Cancer Chemotherapy Rept., 16: 187-89, 1962. 14. Rail, D. P., Stabenau, J. R., and Zubrod, C. G. I)istribution of Drugs between Blood Cerebrospinal Fluid: General Meth 15. Rail, D. P., and Zubrod, J. Pharmacol. C. G. Mechanisms of Drug Exptl. Adsorp tion and Excretion. Ann. Rev. Pharmacoi., 2: 109—28,1962. 16. Rieseibach, H. E., DiChiro, G., Freireich, E. J, and Ball, D. P. Subarachnoid I)istribution of Drugs after Lumbar In jection. New Engl. J. Med., £67:1273—78,1962. 17. Rieselbach, R. E., Morse, E. E., Rall, 1). P., Frei, E., III, and Freireich, E. J. Intrathecal Aminopterin Therapy of Me ningeal Leukemia. Arch. Internal Med., 111: 620-30, 1963. between Spinal ence to Control 1958. Fluid and Arterial of Ventilation. Blood J. Appl. with Relations Special Physioi., Refer 15: 385—92, 19. Schabel, F. M., Jr., Johnston, T. P., McCaleb, G. S., Mont gomery, J. A., Laster, W. it., and Skipper, H. E. Experimental Evaluation of Potential Anticancer Agents. Cancer iles., 23: 1962. 6. Hamilton, L., and Elion, G. B. Fate of 6-Mercaptopurine Man. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci., 60: 304-14, 1954. in 7. Loo, T. L., Michael, I%1.,and Rail, D. P. Distribution and Ex cretion of Certain Purine Antagonists. J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 122: 45A, 1958. 8. Oliverio, V. T., Adamson, R. H., Henderson, E. S., and David son, J. D. The Distribution, Excretion and Metabolism of Methylglyoxal-bis-guanylhydrazone-C'4. Ibid., 14! : 149-56, 725—33, 1963. 20. Schanker, L. S. Passage of I)rugs across Body Membranes. Pharmacol. Rev., 14: 501—30,1962. 21. Streicher, E., Rall, I). P., and Gaskins, J. R. Distribution of Thiocyanate between Plasma and Cerebrospinal Fluid. Am. J. Physiol., 2@: 251-54, 1964. 2. Thomas, ninges: L. B. Pathology of Leukemia in the Brain and Me Postmortem Studies of Patients with Acute Leukemia and of Mice Given Inoculations of L1210 Leukemia. Cancer 1963. 9. Pappenheimer, J. R., Jordan, E. F., and Heisey, S. R. Active Transport of Diodrast and Phenol-sulfonphthalein from Cere brospinal Fluid to Blood. Am. J. Physiol., 200: 1—10, 1961. 10. Rail, D. P. Structure and Function of CSF. In: J. F. Hoffman (ed.), The Cellular Function of Membrane Transport, 269-82. C. S. Extracellular 18. Robin, E., Whaley, II., and Crump, U. Acid-Base 1959. 4. Feldberg, W., and Fleischauer, K. Penetration of Bromphenol Blue from the Perfused Cerebral Ventricles in the Brain Tis Dyes W. W., and Patlak, odology and Effect of pH Gradients. Therap., 125: 185—93,1959. REFERENCES J. H., Miliar, 1577 Space of Brain as Determined by Diffusion of Inuiin from the the cells from the CSF and menin ges, but leave them in heavily inifitrated lymph nodes or other areas ! The problems are different in specifics and in detail, but the general principles described here can be applied to these areas as well as to the central nervous 2. Bloch, D. P., Oppelt, Barrier Engiewood, N. J. : Prentice-Hail, pp. 1964. 11. Rail, D. P., Moore, E., Taylor, N., and Zubrod, C. G. The Blood-CSF Barrier in Man. Arch. Neurol., 4: 318-22, 1961. Res., 25: 1555-1571, 23. Whiteside, Burchenai, Manifestations 1965. J. A., Phillips, J. H. Intrathecal of Leukemia. F. S., Dargeon, H. W., and Amethopterin in Neurological Arch. Internal. Med., 101: @79— 85, 1958. 24. Wollner, N., Murphy, @sI.L., and Gordon, C. S. A Study Intrathecal Methotrexate. Proc. Am. Assoc. Cancer lies., 74,1959. Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 15, 2017. © 1965 American Association for Cancer Research. of 5: Experimental Studies of the Blood-Brain Barrier David P. Rall Cancer Res 1965;25:1572-1577. 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