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Safety and efficacy of selective and superselective intra-arterial cerebral infusion with blood-brain barrier disruption for glioma: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Journal of neurointerventional surgery 2026 Vol.18(5) p. 1337-1346

Ferreira C, Ferreira MY, Cardoso LJC, Scarramal JPL, Nogueira A, Wong T, Bokil S, Singh F, Massimo S, Albers O, Ben-Shalom N, D'Amico R, Langer D, Boockvar J, Serulle Y

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[BACKGROUND] Selective and superselective intra-arterial cerebral infusion (SIACI/SSIACI) delivers chemotherapy directly to tumor-supplying arteries, achieving high local drug levels with reduced syst

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APA Ferreira C, Ferreira MY, et al. (2026). Safety and efficacy of selective and superselective intra-arterial cerebral infusion with blood-brain barrier disruption for glioma: a systematic review and meta-analysis.. Journal of neurointerventional surgery, 18(5), 1337-1346. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnis-2025-024057
MLA Ferreira C, et al.. "Safety and efficacy of selective and superselective intra-arterial cerebral infusion with blood-brain barrier disruption for glioma: a systematic review and meta-analysis.." Journal of neurointerventional surgery, vol. 18, no. 5, 2026, pp. 1337-1346.
PMID 41043867

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Selective and superselective intra-arterial cerebral infusion (SIACI/SSIACI) delivers chemotherapy directly to tumor-supplying arteries, achieving high local drug levels with reduced systemic toxicity. Often combined with blood-brain barrier disruption (BBBd) to enhance penetration, these methods have been widely studied, yet a comprehensive evidence synthesis is lacking. This study systematically assesses the safety and efficacy of intra-arterial chemotherapy with BBBd for glioma treatment.

[METHODS] We searched PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science for studies on SIACI with BBBd in glioma patients. Safety outcomes included rates of cases with complications, procedure-related complications (major/minor), stroke, intracranial and intratumoral hemorrhage, and mortality. Efficacy was based on tumor response (complete, partial, stable disease, progression). A subanalysis of SSIACI-only cases was also conducted.

[RESULTS] Nine studies with 230 glioma patients were included. The pooled rate of cases with complications was 27.1% (95% CI 19.8% to 35.7%), with procedure-related complications occurring in 15.4% (95% CI 6.1% to 24.6%). Major and minor complication rates were 4.3% (95% CI 0.9% to 7.7%) and 9.7% (95% CI 1.0% to 18.7%), respectively. Stroke, intracranial hemorrhage, and intratumoral hemorrhage occurred in 3.1% (95% CI 0% to 6.1%), 0.5% (95% CI 0% to 3.2%), and 0.04% (95% CI 0% to 3%), respectively, with no procedure-related deaths reported. Pooled response rates were 10.4% complete (95% CI 0% to 21.5%), 24.2% partial (95% CI 14.3% to 34.1%), 38.2% stable disease (95% CI 21.5% to 54.9%), and 39.3% progression (95% CI 14.8% to 63.8%). Subanalysis of superselective infusions yielded comparable outcomes to the overall cohort.

[CONCLUSION] The findings indicate that SIACI/SSIACI chemotherapy following BBBd is a feasible and safe approach for glioma treatment, demonstrating a favorable procedural risk profile and preliminary signs of efficacy. Further studies are warranted to validate these results and refine procedural protocols.

MeSH Terms

Humans; Glioma; Blood-Brain Barrier; Infusions, Intra-Arterial; Brain Neoplasms; Treatment Outcome; Antineoplastic Agents

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