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Brain cancer patients, especially those suffering from high-grade gliomas (HGGs) face a bleak future with very dismal long-term disease-free survival outcomes due to the limited treatment options currently available. Therefore, there is an unmet need for new therapeutic intervention that extends patients' progress-free survival and improves their quality of life. A significant hurdle is the inability of current chemotherapy agents to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). BBB acts as a protective shield that filters the blood to ensure nothing harmful makes it to the brain. This protection is usually good, but it becomes a problem if you want to deliver therapeutic cancer drugs through it. This barrier blocks 98% of drugs from entering the brain. Even the ones that cross BBB are unevenly distributed in the normal brain and tumour tissue, resulting in mediocre treatment and severe side effects.
Jose et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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