[Home]   [Full version]  

Old antibiotic may find new life as a stroke treatment

May 19 ,Medicine & Health



Full size image
An old intravenous antibiotic may have new life as a stroke treatment, researchers say. Minocycline appears to reduce stroke damage in multiple ways – inhibiting white blood cells and enzymes that, at least acutely, can destroy brain tissue and blood vessels, respectively, says Dr. David Hess, chair of the Department of Neurology in the Medical College of Georgia School of Medicine. The broad-spectrum antibiotic also seems to reduce cell suicide in the minutes and hours following a stroke, enabling more cells to recover.

He and other researchers leading a clinical trial that will study the drug in 60 stroke patients in Georgia, Kentucky and Oregon say they believe the antibiotic will be a safe, effective adjunct therapy for tPA, the only FDA-approved drug therapy for strokes.

“It’s a safe drug that is easy to give and tolerate, that gets into the brain well, and may reduce bleeding, the primary side effect of tPA,” says Dr. Hess, principal investigator on the $1.8 million National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-funded clinical trial. “We think it will make strokes smaller and patient outcomes better.”

Their animal studies have shown the drug, given within six hours of a stroke, then every 12 hours for up to three days - the peak time of inflammation - reduces stroke damage by up to 40 percent.

“We know it’s safe in humans and we know the concentrations we need to see improvement in the brains of rats can be achieved safely in humans,” says Dr. Susan C. Fagan, professor of pharmacy at the University of Georgia, assistant dean for the MCG program of the UGA College of Pharmacy and study co-investigator. “That’s an important consideration.”

The drug’s safety and optimal stroke dose are the primary focus of the phase-one clinical trial in stroke patients who arrive at MCG, University of Kentucky or Oregon Health & Science University within six hours of symptom onset and with measurable neurological symptoms. Every study patient will get one of four doses, starting with 200 milligrams, the most common dose already used, and increasing incrementally up to 700 milligrams. They’ll get half their first dose at subsequent 12-hour intervals for a three-day period then be followed for 90 days.

“We are going to be drawing samples from patients to make sure we achieve the concentrations that we want in the blood, plus we want to define the half-life in stroke patients to see if it’s different than in the younger patients who take it for other reasons,’ says Dr. Fagan. Newer intravenous antibiotics have replaced minocycline in the United States, but an oral version is used to treat conditions such as acne and rheumatoid arthritis. “If the half-life is longer, we can give it less frequently. We are really fine-tuning the dose,” she says. They’ll do this by looking in the blood for biomarkers, indicators of inflammation, to see if inflammatory factors go up after three days. “It may give us a clue we should treat patients longer,” says Dr. Fagan, a co-investigator on the studies leading to minocycline’s use in rheumatoid arthritis.

One way minocycline fights inflammation is by inhibiting microglial cells, white blood cells activated by a stroke, says Dr. Hess. “When they get activated, they get angry and produce materials that damage the brain. The inflammatory cascade is bad and good. Early on it’s bad, later on it may actually do some good things,” he says. Typically these microglial cells are sentinel immune cells for the brain, helping eliminate infections and secreting factors that support neurons. However, acutely in a stroke, brain tissue can become their target. “They are basically cleaning house at first, then later, they are supportive, releasing growth factors and promoting the growth of new blood vessels,” adds Dr. Fagan.

Minocycline also blocks matrix metallo-proteinases, also released during stroke, which destroy the basement membrane of blood vessels. The presence of these enzymes also is a mixed bag. “If you want angiogenesis – you want to make new blood vessels – you need MMPs around to get rid of the old ones, like tearing down an old building to build a new one,” says Dr. Hess. However, in patients lucky enough to get the clot buster tPA, the enzyme increases the major risk factor: bleeding. Dr. Hess notes that while this initial clinical trial is in ischemic strokes, he thinks minocycline also may be useful in hemorrhagic strokes, which account for about 12 percent of strokes, where clearly blocking MMPs would come in handy.

Minocycline also works by blocking apoptosis, or cell suicide, an observation originally made by MCG Cell Biologist Zheng Dong. “It does this by increasing a protein called bcl-2, which helps cells survive,” says Dr. Hess.

The antibiotic’s potential usefulness in protecting brain cells began surfacing in scientific literature within the last few years. “It was so interesting to us because we knew that a lot of the limitations of other drugs that had been tried in rodents but didn’t work in stroke patients were that they didn’t cross into the brain,” Dr. Fagan says. “We knew that minocycline did based on previous experiments and the fact that many people who take it for acne or rheumatoid arthritis get dizzy. So we were encouraged by this.

“We wanted something we could give at least three hours after stroke or later. In our studies in animal models, we found at delayed time intervals it was profoundly neuroprotective,” says Dr. Fagan. “We studied it at multiple time points at multiple doses and, in fact, some of the most important work we did was finding out how the rodent dose really could be translated to humans,” she says, referencing work published in Experimental Neurology in 2004.

For the clinical trial, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals will make the sterile powder used for injection available from Japan, where it’s still in use.

Source: Medical College of Georgia

Related stories:

Mayo Clinic spearheads research to discover unsuspected gene for atrial fibrillation
Mayo Clinic researchers have found a gene mutation linked to one family's hereditary form of atrial fibrillation. Researchers hope this discovery will lead to better understanding of the disease and, eventually, better ways to predict, prevent and treat the heart rhythm problem.
Seasonal programmed brain cell death foiled in living birds
Neurons in brains of one songbird species equipped with a built-in suicide program that kicks in at the end of the breeding season have been kept alive for seven days in live birds by researchers trying to understand the role that steroid hormones play in the growth and maintenance of the neural song system.
Statins have unexpected effect on pool of powerful brain cells
Cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins have a profound effect on an elite group of cells important to brain health as we age, scientists at the University of Rochester Medical Center have found. The new findings shed light on a long-debated potential role for statins in the area of dementia.
Nerve cells derived from stem cells and transplanted into mice may lead to improved brain treatments
Scientists at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research have, for the first time, genetically programmed embryonic stem (ES) cells to become nerve cells when transplanted into the brain, according to a study published today in The Journal of Neuroscience. The research, an important step toward developing new treatments for stroke, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and other neurological conditions showed that mice afflicted by stroke showed tangible therapeutic improvement following transplantation of these cells. None of the mice formed tumors, which had been a major setback in prior attempts at stem cell transplantation.
Umbilical cord blood cell transplants may help ALS patients
Moderate dose proves most effective in mouse model
A study at the University of South Florida has shown that transplants of mononuclear human umbilical cord blood (MNChUCB) cells may help patients suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. A disease in which the motor neurons in the spinal cord and brain degenerate, ALS leaves its victims with progressive muscle weakness, paralysis and, finally, respiratory failure three to five years after diagnosis.
Inflammatory disease causes blindness
People suffering from a type of connective tissue disease characterized by inflammation of arteries in the head are three times more likely to experience blindness, new Geisinger research shows.
Memory loss linked to common sleep disorder
For the first time, UCLA researchers have discovered that people with sleep apnea show tissue loss in brain regions that help store memory. Reported in the June 27 edition of the journal Neuroscience Letters, the findings emphasize the importance of early detection of the disorder, which afflicts an estimated 20 million Americans.
The good news in our DNA: Defects you can fix with vitamins and minerals
As the cost of sequencing a single human genome drops rapidly, with one company predicting a price of $100 per person in five years, soon the only reason not to look at your "personal genome" will be fear of what bad news lies in your genes.

News discussion:

Medicine & Health news

[Home]   [Full version]