A ,B, Cs of Brain Tumors -- From Their Biology to Their Treatments

by John R. Mangiardi, M.D. and Howard Kane Wm.
 Brain tumors -- the very words strike fear in the heart of anyone threatened by one. It once was considered one of the most frightful events that could occur. Today, however, with improving technology and the gradual unfolding of scientific understanding of the basic biology of brain tumors, patients and families can look to the future with considerably more hope.

Scientists, physicians and researchers ponder the limitless questions concerning brain tumors: What does a brain tumor eat for breakfast? How does it really function? Why can't we get rid of this thing now? Why did person A get a brain tumor and not B? What causes brain tumors? These are just a few of the hundreds of questions plaguing scientists, researchers, as well as patients, their families and their physicians.

Firstly, the brain is an incredibly complex organ. Like a true resident in an Ivory Tower, the brain lives apart from, and quite differently than, the rest of the body. The brain contains about 10 Billion (10,000,000,000) working brain cells. They are called neurons and make over 13 Trillion (13,000,000,000,000) connections with each other to form the most sophisticated organic computer on the planet -- maybe even the universe. By today's computer standards, the brain far exceeds any network of linked state-of-the-art computers.

Despite such complexity, most of the brain is made up of supporting cells. The vast majority of these are called astrocytes. These cells are the support "stuff" of the brain, and serve as a scaffold for the working brain cells and other structures. Oligodendrocytes, another type of brain cell, are much fewer in number; they are primarily responsible for making the covers (called myelin) for the vast wiring system of the brain. The ependymal cells are fewest in number; they simply cover the inner surfaces of the brain called ventricles.

The entire brain floats in a self contained sort of womb, and like a fetus, is surrounded by and filled with a watery fluid known as cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). These fluid spaces, when obstructed by a tumor, may enlarge and cause pressure within the closed box of the hard skull to increase dangerously. This is referred to as hydrocephalus or water-on-the-brain.

The brain has various coverings (meninges or dura), just like a wet football with its inner bladder and outer pigskin shell. They hold things securely in their proper place. The cells of the meninges are unique, and some of them are capable of filtering the brain fluid (CSF) back into the bloodstream by a sort of one way valve system. They are called arachnoid cap cells.

Also, attached to the brain are a couple of hangers on. Literally, hanging beneath the brain is the Pituitary Gland, a kind of Wizard of Oz box of hormonal cells that control almost all of the body's hormonal systems. Hanging just behind the brain is a little pine cone called the Pineal Gland, the "third eye." It tells the body when it is day and when it is night via its now popular brain hormone, melatonin.

Brain tumors originate from one cell at a time and travel to other brain cells, unlike other cancers (e.g. bladder and blood cancers). So, it makes sense that the tumors of the brain occur in a frequency that corresponds directly with how many of each cell type are present in the first point of tumor.

Brain tumors can arise either from the brain itself (primary brain tumors: astrocytoma, glioblastoma, oligodendroglioma, ependymoma), or its coverings (meningiomas, pituitary tumors, pineal tumors), or the nerves at the base of the brain (acoustic neuromas, schwannomas), or even from outside the brain (metastatic brain tumors) . This last case occurs when cancer cells travel through the bloodstream and lodge in the brain.

The vast majority of brain tumors are primary. Of these, the malignant astrocytoma and glioblastoma multiforme are the most common, and are responsible for the bad reputation that brain tumors carry.

Important Points Regarding Primary Brain Tumors

With these observations in mind, the therapy of primary brain tumors has been sharply focused, because only the brain needs to be treated, not the entire body.

But, the treatment of brain tumors is extremely difficult because of polyclonicity, the Blood:Brain barrier, the diffuse infiltrative nature of these tumors, and the perilous location of some tumors.

CONCLUSION:

 The only therapy(ies) that could possibly cure primary brain tumors must:

     

We take other factors into consideration as well. Using the Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) as an example, the physician needs to consider the following factors:

GROWTH DYNAMICS (GBM)

 Growth Fraction = 20 % (Only a percentage of the tumor is growing at any one time)

 Cell Cycle Time = 2 - 5 Days (This is how long it takes a growing cell to reproduce)

 Cell Loss = 80 - 90 % (A high percentage of cells spontaneously die off)

 Doubling Time = Around 7 Days

 Therefore, any therapy aimed at controlling the growth of this tumor must recognize the above dynamics. Therapy must catch the cells at the appropriate phase of the cell cycle (when they are sensitive to treatment), take into account tumor doubling time, and acknowlege that the growth fraction is relatively small.

 There are other problems to take into account as well:

Many cells live in a low oxygen environment (hypoxic). These hypoxic cells are:

The blood supply to the tumor is quite peripheral, surrounding rather than entering it. The center of the tumor (necrotic center) contains living tumor cells. Therefore, much of the tumor is virtually unavailable to chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy or any other therapy.

Standard Therapy

To date, the best treatment for the malignant astrocytoma and GBM is a combination of: This combination is now "standard therapy", and has been the benchmark to which all other therapies have been compared. Unfortunately, this protocol represents only a single month of improvement over surgery alone! In other words, in over thirty years of clinical research, very little has been done with any outstanding success! (The newly formed Foundation for Neuosurgical Research, however, is dedicated to changing this track record. It will be focused specifically on brain tumor patient improvement alone!)

"Standard therapy" in this country has failed to alleviate, despite spawning 400-plus new, different protocols. This presents a mind-boggling problem for patients and their families, especially when ofttimes they don't even know what a brain tumor really is! Added to the confusion is the enormous proliferation of new technologies becoming available to treat these tumors: lasers, stereotactic computers, cryosurgery, thermal killing machines, ultrasound, radiosurgery, the Gamma Knife, the X-Knife, photoirradiation, blood:brain barrier disruption, boron neutron capture, etc.

Where do science and technology meet the logic of brain tumor biology? What is purely experimental? What is logically worth the effort? What are the numbers? Where does a therapist's enthusiasm for new technology or protocol end, and logical approach to these tumors begin? These are just some of the newer questions which arise during the first weeks after coming in contact with the problem of a malignant brain tumor.

A Guide to the Perplexed

Considering all of the above, the following is a suggested method for approaching the therapy of malignant primary brain tumors. Be logical.

 Imagine that a particular tumor weighs about 100 grams. Consider the following:

100 gm of tumor = 100 billion cells, approximately.

 If a tumor size can double in volume in a matter of weeks, it would make sense to decrease the size of the mass of the tumor right away. Otherwise, a patient could not make it through a treatment course. Surgery is the way to radically reduce the volume of a tumor, removing anywhere from 80 to 99% of the tumor mass. Recent advances in surgical technologies have aided in the removal of brain tumor tissue with a newer, higher net percentage tumor reduction of 90-99%. These include computer assisted stereotactic surgery, laser instrumentation (carbon dioxide, argon, and Yag), ultrasonic aspiration, operative phototherapy, etc.

 Consider the following: