WO1999033492A1 - Method for tissue perfusion - Google Patents
Method for tissue perfusion Download PDFInfo
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- WO1999033492A1 WO1999033492A1 PCT/US1998/027926 US9827926W WO9933492A1 WO 1999033492 A1 WO1999033492 A1 WO 1999033492A1 US 9827926 W US9827926 W US 9827926W WO 9933492 A1 WO9933492 A1 WO 9933492A1
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- tissue
- solution
- active agent
- volume
- ethanol
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K9/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by special physical form
- A61K9/0012—Galenical forms characterised by the site of application
- A61K9/0019—Injectable compositions; Intramuscular, intravenous, arterial, subcutaneous administration; Compositions to be administered through the skin in an invasive manner
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K47/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient
- A61K47/06—Organic compounds, e.g. natural or synthetic hydrocarbons, polyolefins, mineral oil, petrolatum or ozokerite
- A61K47/08—Organic compounds, e.g. natural or synthetic hydrocarbons, polyolefins, mineral oil, petrolatum or ozokerite containing oxygen, e.g. ethers, acetals, ketones, quinones, aldehydes, peroxides
- A61K47/10—Alcohols; Phenols; Salts thereof, e.g. glycerol; Polyethylene glycols [PEG]; Poloxamers; PEG/POE alkyl ethers
Definitions
- compositions and methods for producing facile perfusion of active agents in tissues following direct intra-tissue delivery relate to compositions and methods to identify those compositions capable of producing novel pharmacological activities of an active agent following intra-tissue delivery.
- liposomes to encapsulate agents in the hydrophilic aqueous interspaces or in the lipid bilayer for hydrophobic compounds is another delivery method limited by the inability to achieve adequate targeting and perfusion through solid tissue.
- Antineoplastic solutions consisting of an organic water miscible solvent vehicle containing an antineoplastic agent solute have been previously shown to be effective for the rapid and effective perfusion of solid tumors (Pietronigro 1991 U.S. Pat. No. 5,051 ,257 and Pietronigro 1992, U.S. Pat. No. 5,162,115).
- Non-neoplastic mammalian tissues are tissues or tissue regions not comprised entirely of a new and abnormal formation of tissue such as a solid palpable tumor, but rather, a tissue comprised essentially of original normal tissue which now, in part, contains: abnormal (i.e., damaged or diseased) tissue components, e.g., dispersed, individual cancerous cells, ischemic cells, thrombosed blood vessels, cells expressing specific aberrant gene products(s), cells producing specific gene products in abnormal quantities or unnatural extracellular accumulations of substances; and/or foreign elements, e.g., infectious agents such as bacteria and viruses and fungi.
- Mixed tissues are tissues containing both regions of normal tissue and regions of non-neoplastic tissues.
- the structural integrity found in normal tissues is a result of the presence of cell-cell junctions (e.g., tight junctions, desmosomes), cell-cell surface adhesion molecules (e.g., cadherins) and cell- basement membrane adhesion molecules (e.g. integrins).
- the cell-cell and cell- basement membrane attachments are reduced in tumors as a result of a decrease in the expression of molecules responsible for these interactions (Dvorak 1998, Critical issues in Tumor Microcirculation, Angiogenesis and Metastasis, Lecture 1 , 1-17, St. Croix 1997, Current Opinion in Oncology, 9, 549-556).
- the cells in tumors grow in small clumps distributed throughout the interstitial space, with little cell-cell attachment, or structural integrity.
- Normal tissue consists of highly organized three- dimensional arrangements of cells, often many cell layers thick.
- Tumor blood vessels lack the structural integrity of blood vessels in normal tissue. Tumor vessels are hyperpermeable (Dvorak 1998, Critical Issues in Tumor Microcirculation, Angiogenesis and Metastasis, Lecture 1 , 1-17), and lack the normal basement membrane surrounding the vessels in normal tissue.
- the lymphatic system present in normal tissue is lacking in tumors. Fluid in the interstitial space is drained by lymphatic vessels in normal tissue. In tumors, there is a build up of fluid in the interstitium due to the absence of lymphatics and the hyperpermeability of the blood vessels which results in an increase in the pressure in the interstitial space.
- a pressure gradient exists in tumors, the highest pressure being at the tumor center and which decreases towards the edge of the tumor (Jain, 1997, Microcirculation, 4(1), 1-23).
- the low cell density and increased interstitial space of solid tumors provides an ideal medium for the organic water miscible solvent vehicle to penetrate through. Arrangement of cells in clumps with little adhesion between them enables all cells throughout the tumor to be perfused with the antineoplastic solution.
- the interstitial pressure gradient that exists from the center to the outer edge of the tumor would aid perfusion of an antineoplastic solution injected into the tumor center.
- non-neoplastic tissues having relatively small interstitial space coupled with the rigid cellular organization and structural integrity present many barriers to the transport of an active agent administered by direct injection.
- the high degree of cell-cell and cell-basement membrane interactions, high cell density and many cell layers present physical barriers to the distribution of an active agent.
- the lack of a pressure gradient is also believed to act to lessen distribution of a solution throughout the tissue.
- the effective perfusion through non- neoplastic tissues, normal tissue or mixed tissues remains a problem.
- compositions and a method for the facile perfusion of an active agent throughout a tissue Accordingly it is an object of the present invention to provide compositions and a method for the facile perfusion of an active agent throughout a tissue.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide compositions and a method to selectively affect a subset of tissue components by the facile perfusion of an active agent throughout a tissue.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide compositions and a method to treat a tissue with a high (previously unobtainable) dose of an active agent.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide compositions and a method for producing novel pharmacological activities of active agents in tissues.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide compositions and a method to alter the spectrum of activity of an active agent attainable jn vivo.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a method for the identification of novel pharmacological activities of an active agent.
- facile perfusion of a mammalian tissue with an active agent is achieved by direct intra-tissue injection of solutions consisting of active agent solutes in water miscible organic solvent vehicles.
- the active agents are chosen to have solubility, stability and bioavailability in the water miscible organic solvent vehicle.
- Intra-tissue injection of these solutions permits high levels of active agent solute to readily permeate through the tissue and into cells thereby achieving heretofore unobtainable levels at target sites.
- the facile perfusion results in high degrees of efficacy and can produce selective effects on the abnormal tissue components and foreign elements of the tissue perfused and can also produce novel pharmacological or biochemical actions previously unknown or unattainable in vivo due to the high levels of active agent delivered to the tissue.
- FIGS 1a and 1b illustrate the effects of increasing concentration of BCNU on volume of tissue affected.
- Figure 2 illustrates perfusion of mixed tissue with an active agent following surgical resection of a tumor.
- FIGS 3a and 3b illustrate selective effects of an active agent on abnormal tissue components.
- Figure 4 is a graph depicting correlation of carmustine concentration injected with the percent of prostatic tissue affected at two weeks post-injection.
- the present invention provides methods for the rapid and efficient penetration (i.e., facile perfusion) of tissue with an active agent by the direct injection into the tissue of a pharmaceutically acceptable organic water miscible solvent vehicle having a partition coefficient of at least about 0.1 , and an active agent solute.
- the solvent vehicles useful for facile perfusion of active agents are water miscible organic solvents which are soluble in water and which also partition and diffuse into and through biological cell membranes from aqueous solutions. Their usefulness is based not only upon their solvent power for the therapeutic agent, but also upon their ability to permeate the tissue effectively.
- molecular movement through the aqueous phase is driven by the high water solubility of such vehicles which, in a preferred embodiment, is infinite or nearly so at physiologic conditions. Since the majority of tissue substance is aqueous, water miscibility or solubility of the organic solvent component is important. Additionally, the water miscible organicvehiclesofthe present invention have sufficient lipophilicity to move into cellular membranes from aqueous solution.
- Molecular characteristics that endow this ability are molecular weight of less than about one thousand Daltons, measured as described in Morrison and Boyd, Organic Chemistry, pp. 412-413, Allyn and Bacon Inc., Boston, 1966, and electrical neutrality (that is, absence of charge) as demonstrated by molecular formula.
- a direct measure of molecular movement from aqueous solution into lipids is the partition coefficient as described, for example, by Cornford et al., "Comparison of Lipid-Mediated Blood-Brain-Barrier Penetrability in Neonates and Adults", in American Journal of Physiology 243 (1982), pp. C161-C168.
- the preferred water miscible organic solvents of the present invention have partition coefficients of at least about 0.1.
- Exemplary water miscible organic solvents possessing the foregoing characteristics and which are therefore useful as direct delivery vehicles in the present invention are: methanol, ethanol, 1-propanol, 2-propanol, 1-propen-3-ol(allyl alcohol), 2-methyl-2-propanol tertiary butyl alcohol), diacetonealcohol, N'N'-dimethylformamide, dimethylsulfoxide, 1 ,3-dioxane, acetone, pyridine, tetrahydrofuran, ethylene glycol and propylene glycol, used alone or in combination.
- the preferred solvent is absolute ethanol.
- other useful organic solvent vehicles can also be identified by their water solubility and biological membrane diffusivity.
- the usefulness of 1-butanol would be somewhat limited while the use of aliphatic alcohols higher than C4 would be contra indicated for use in the invention due to the limited water solubilities such alcohols.
- Active agents include those which are soluble in the above solvents
- antineoplastic agents such as BCNU or carmustine, hormones, cell membrane receptor ligands and antimetabolites
- target cells including antineoplastic agents such as BCNU or carmustine, hormones, cell membrane receptor ligands and antimetabolites
- cellular components such as epithelial, endothelial and mesenchymal cells, or extracellular components such as extracellular matrix proteins, carbohydrates and lipids.
- carmustine an anti-tumor agent
- the active agent is preferably dissolved in the organic solvent to a concentration such that when a therapeutically effective volume of the solution of the invention is delivered into a tissue, there results a dose of the agent solute in said tissue of at least two logs greater than its effective dose 50% (ED50), that is, the dose of agent in said tissue that produces the desired therapeutic effect on 50% of the target cells.
- ED50 effective dose 50%
- the organic vehicle permeates the tissue it transports a therapeutically effective concentration of the agent solute therewith. In this way high levels of the active agent can be delivered discretely and with relative safety to the tissue.
- the water miscible organic vehicle component of the solution can also be considered to be increasing the solubility of the agent within the tissue, thereby allowing therapeutically effective levels of the active agent to invest the tissue.
- active agents with high solubility in the water miscible organic solvent vehicles of the invention will themselves usually tend to have good cellular diffusivity characteristics and can thus, upon direct in-the-tissue administration, diffuse relatively efficiently on their own, in many instances, beyond the perfusion zone of the solvent vehicle component.
- the stability and bio-availability of the active agent in the selected solvent vehicle aid in insuring that high levels of active agent permeate the tissue.
- the invention includes the use of an imaging device for monitoring the perfusion of a tissue with an active agent and a method for the use of an imaging device for geographical assessment of the effects of an active agent upon a tissue.
- compositions and method of the invention can be employed to cause the facile perfusion of non-neoplastic tissue, normal tissue and mixed tissues with an active agent.
- the facile perfusion causes volumes of tissue much larger than the volume of solution injected to be effectively treated with an active agent.
- the compositions can be formulated so that the active agent produces selective effects upon one or more tissue components or foreign elements; produces novel pharmacological, biochemical or biological effects due to the high levels of active agent actually delivered to tissue target sites; and/or produces non-selective effects upon all the tissues regions and elements perfused.
- non-neoplastic and mixed tissues which can be treated with the present invention include those infected with pathological agents, e.g., bacteria, viruses, fungi; brain tissue of Alzheimers patients; traumatized tissue, e.g., following head or spinal cord injury; arthritic tissue; tissue foci producing epileptic seizures; glaucomatous tissue; tissue undergoing inflammation; Parkinsons disease tissue; tissue containing diffuse cancer cells and micrometastases; tissue undergoing rheumatic disease; prostatic tissue undergoing benign hypertrophy; endometriosis tissue; osteoporosis tissue; mis-functioning central nervous system tissue producing depression, psychosis, or other nervous system disorders; ischemic tissue of the brain, heart and other organs; and tissues producing a pain response.
- pathological agents e.g., bacteria, viruses, fungi
- brain tissue of Alzheimers patients e.g., traumatized tissue, e.g., following head or spinal cord injury
- arthritic tissue tissue foci producing epileptic seizures
- Modifications of the solutions developed can be used to adjust the volume of tissue affected by an active agent.
- the solutions can be modified to affect any volume of tissue desired.
- Evidence of this is given in Example 1 , with the direct injection of ethanol into feline brain.
- a volume of ethanol of 0.4 ml produces no toxic effects on the tissue (a circular lesion with a diameter of 2-5 mm, and a corresponding volume of 0.004-0.065 ml is found which corresponds to the location of the needle point and is typical of local mechanical disruption).
- the same volume of ethanol (0.4 ml) containing 5 mg (12.5 mg/ml) of carmustine produces the same result as that of ethanol alone, with no toxic effects observed.
- the present invention enables the dosing of a tissue with previously unobtainable levels of an active pharmaceutical, biological or radiotherapeutic agent and thereby produces high degrees of efficacy, i.e., greater pharmacological or biological activity than can be obtained using standard compositions and methods of delivery including systemic administration.
- high levels of active agent can be perfused into tissue using the present invention that novel pharmacological effects of the active agent can be produced as demonstrated by Example 1 involving administration into normal feline brain.
- a combination of a small volume of ethanol (50 ⁇ l) and high concentration of carmustine (200 or 400 mg/ml) resulted in the destruction of a relatively large volume of tissue consisting of post-mitotic cells.
- compositions and intra-tissue injection methods of the present invention can be used to identify novel pharmacological and biochemical actions of an active agent; i.e., actions which heretofore were unknown or unobtainable in medical practice.
- Methods utilizing in vivo tissues (as described in Examples 1 ,3,4) as well as ex vivo tissue preparations including whole organs, organ sections, tissue slices, cell spheroids, and other tissue culture preparations can be used to identify novel effects of active agents.
- the solutions of the present invention can be modified in their concentration of active agent in order to selectively affect abnormal tissue components or foreign elements following the direct injection of the solutions into the tissue regions.
- 100% ethanol and 3.3 mg/ml carmustine is shown to selectively kill tumor cells.
- solutions containing carmustine up to 100 mg/ml in brain and up to 50 mg/ml in liver produce no toxic effects. Therefore, non-neoplastic and mixed tissue can be perfused with solutions having selected active agent concentrations that do not affect normal tissue, but affect abnormal tissue components or foreign elements (figures 2 and 3).
- Examples of selective effects include the delivery of a solution containing a hormone or angiogenic active agent, which actions are limited to cells bearing the complementary receptor.
- an anti-infectious agent with actions limited to infected cells and/or an extra-cellular infectious agent.
- Pharmaceutical, biotherapeutic (biological), or radiotherapeutic active agents may be employed in practicing the present invention.
- pharmaceutical active agents which can be used with the present invention include, but are not limited to: anti-infective agents (cefuroxime, tetracycline), alpha adrenergic agonists (apraclonidine hydrochloride), Alzheimers disease management agents (physostigmine, tacrine hydrochloride, indomethacin), amino acids (p-aminobenzoic acid), central nervous system agents (amphetamine, haloperidol, phenytoin), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis therapeutic agents (vitamin E, riluzole), analgesics (acetaminophen, fentanyl, aspirin), anesthetics (cocaine, lidocaine, ethyl chloride), anorectal products
- Useful biotherapeutic active agents include monoclonal antibodies (e.g., abciximab), monoclonal antibody cytotoxic conjugates of drugs and toxins, for example, ricin A chain or pokeweed antiviral protein; cytokines, biologic response modifiers (e.g., filgrastim), lymphokines, interferons (e.g., interferon alfa 2A), interieukins, growth factors, growth factor inhibitors, natural recombinant and synthetic proteins (e.g., adenoviral E1b 55 Kd protein, proteinase inhibitor (human) A), angiogenics (e.g., vascular endothelial growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor), anti-angiogenics (e.g., angiostatin), vaccines (e.g., poison ivy extract), enzymes (e.g., pancreatin, dornase-alfa), peptides, genes, nucleic acids and their functional equivalents.
- agents can be made more soluble in the organic solvent vehicles of the invention by incorporating suitable amino acid residues or sequences into their molecular architecture, or by direct chemical modification.
- suitable amino acid residues or sequences are reported in "Inhibition of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome virus by oligodeoxynucleoside methyl phosphonates", Sarin et al, (Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA, 85 (1988), pp 7448-7451), where antisense nucleic acid analogs with suitable organic solvent solubility characteristics were synthesized.
- Useful radiotherapeutic active agents include radioisotope labeled monoclonal antibodies, other radioisotope labeled cell specific homing agents and metabolites exhibiting specific preference for specific cells or extracellular components and radioisotope labeled agents not displaying any specific cell or extracellular component homing selectivity but having the solubility characteristics of the present invention.
- Contrast agents can also be included for use with the appropriate imaging devices including ultrasound, CT, MRI, and PET (positron emission tomography), provided they are compatible with the solvents and active agents used in the invention. Contrast agents include such materials as iodized oil (lipiodol), iocarmic acid, iodamide, iocetamic acid, iobenzamic acid for use with CT, gadodiamide, gadopentetic acid, gadoteridol, for use with MRI, and air bubbles for ultrasound.
- the active agents to be employed can remain effectively stable, bioavailable and can be solubilized to therapeutically effective concentrations, and where the organic water miscible solvent vehicle can maintain its tissue penetrating ability in the presence of aqueous or lipoidal substances, said solvent vehicle can also tolerate the presence therein of such aqueous or lipoidal substances. Accordingly, where this circumstance is encountered, it is contemplated that the water miscible organic solvent vehicles of the present invention can also contain such aqueous or lipoidal substances up to that concentration at which significant loss of a) the solvents ability to permeate the tissue, or b) stability, bioavailability or solubility of the active agent occurs.
- the maximum concentration of aqueous or lipoidal substances to be tolerated in the water miscible organic solvent vehicles of the invention can vary widely as a function of the specific aqueous and/or lipoidal substance(s) to be included, the specific active agent, the organic solvent vehicle, and the active agent concentration to be formulated.
- the method described preferably uses a needle to deliver the solution, an implantable device may also be utilized.
- any such device must permit the vehicle and active agent to exit at similar rates so as to permit the organic solvent vehicle to convey therapeutically effective doses of the agent throughout the tissue. Needle delivery has the advantage of accessing a large treatment volume while requiring only a small incision.
- Example 1 The results of Example 1 are summarized in Table 1.
- a volume of ethanol of 0.4ml directly injected into the brain produced no toxic effects on the tissue (a circular lesion with a diameter of 2-5 mm, and a corresponding volume of 0.004-0.065 ml is found which corresponds to the location of the needle point and is typical of local mechanical disruption).
- the injection of the same volume of ethanol (0.4 ml) containing 5 mg (12.5 mg/ml) of carmustine has the same result as direct injection of ethanol alone, with no toxic effects observed.
- Fifty rats bearing tumors ranging from 550 to 1634 mm 3 were randomly divided into eight treatment groups and 2 control groups. The following treatments were respectively administered to the eight treatment groups:
- Group I 5% tumor volume absolute ethanol (10 mg/tumor carmustine)
- Group II 10% tumor volume absolute ethanol (10 mg/tumor carmustine)
- Group III 25% tumor volume absolute ethanol (10 mg/tumor carmustine)
- Group IV 50% tumor volume absolute ethanol (10 mg/tumor carmustine)
- Group V 10% tumor volume absolute ethanol (33 mg/ml carmustine)
- Group VI 100% tumor volume absolute ethanol (3.3 mg/ml carmustine)
- Group VII 100% tumor volume absolute ethanol & water (3.3 mg/ml carmustine)
- Group VIII 100% tumor volume water (3.3 mg/ml carmustine)
- the control animals received no treatment.
- Random-source adult male canines were used in this experiment. All animals had a palpable prostate gland consistent with an adult-sized canine gland. The animals had free access to water and were fed on a standard schedule.
- Body surface area (m2) was calculated for each animal using published tables. On the day of surgery, the animals were preanesthetized with acepromazine (0.22 mg/kg) and atropine (0.05 mg/kg) intramuscularly. General anesthesia was induced with intravenous thiopental sodium (20-25 mg/kg) and, following orotracheal intubation, was maintained with a 0.5-2.0% halothane-oxygen mixture given through a semi-closed circle system. Perioperative antibiotics consisted of intravenous gentamicin (3 mg/kg) on the day of surgery and daily intramuscular gentamicin (3 mg/kg) for seven days following surgery.
- the bladder and prostate were exposed and the periprostatic fat was carefully dissected off of the base of the gland.
- TRUS imaging of the prostate as well as direct visualization through the peritoneotomy a three inch 20 gauge spinal needle connected to a standard 10-cc luer-lock syringe containing the appropriate aliquot for injection was guided into the base of the right lobe of the prostate.
- the needle tip was localized within the prostatic parenchyma with ultrasound guidance and appropriately positioned.
- Animals were randomly divided into subgroups. Animals A1 and A2 received a volume of dehydrated ethanol equal to 100% of the measured prostate volume while the remaining animals received a volume of 98% dehydrated ethanol equal to 50% of the total gland volume as determined by TRUS imaging.
- the animals received escalating doses of Carmustine dissolved in dehydrated ethanol: A1 and A2 2 mg/ml; B1 and B2, 5mg/ml; C1 and C2 12.5 mg/ml; D1 and D2 18 mg/ml; and E1 and E2, 25 mg/ml. All animal subgroups were injected on separate days under general anesthesia through a midline peritoneotomy approach using TRUS guidance for needle placement.
- the needle was initially positioned at the ventral aspect of the apex of the gland and then withdrawn from apex to base during the injection. The needle was then repositioned toward the dorsal aspect of the gland at the apex and withdrawn toward the base during the injection so that as much of the parenchyma could be covered as possible.
- the solution was injected into the liver slowly over a period of about 2 minutes, using a Hamilton microliter syringe (702) equipped with a 27 gauge needle. The needle was withdrawn and the abdominal incision closed using 4-0 plain gut to seal the peritoneum and skin clips to close the skin. Observations of each animal were made hourly for 4 hours during the day of surgery and daily thereafter for two weeks. At two weeks the animals were sacrificed and their livers examined grossly for lesions at the site of injection.
- NPND No perceptible neurological deficit TABLE 2 Walker 256 Subcutaneous Model in Rats
- PU periurethral *left + right ** left + right + periurethral
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Abstract
Description
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Priority Applications (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP98965052A EP1042004A4 (en) | 1997-12-31 | 1998-12-31 | Method for tissue perfusion |
CA002315092A CA2315092A1 (en) | 1997-12-31 | 1998-12-31 | Method for tissue perfusion |
AU20245/99A AU746153B2 (en) | 1997-12-31 | 1998-12-31 | Method for tissue perfusion |
JP2000526242A JP2001527051A (en) | 1997-12-31 | 1998-12-31 | Tissue perfusion method |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US7017597P | 1997-12-31 | 1997-12-31 | |
US60/070,175 | 1997-12-31 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
WO1999033492A1 true WO1999033492A1 (en) | 1999-07-08 |
WO1999033492A9 WO1999033492A9 (en) | 1999-09-30 |
Family
ID=22093614
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US1998/027926 WO1999033492A1 (en) | 1997-12-31 | 1998-12-31 | Method for tissue perfusion |
Country Status (5)
Country | Link |
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EP (1) | EP1042004A4 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2001527051A (en) |
AU (1) | AU746153B2 (en) |
CA (1) | CA2315092A1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO1999033492A1 (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE10111486A1 (en) * | 2001-03-09 | 2002-10-02 | Ralph R Dawirs | Use of one or more neuroactive substances for the treatment of Parkinson's disease |
US8294757B2 (en) | 2007-06-26 | 2012-10-23 | Agency For Science, Technology And Research | Imaging chamber with window and micro-needle platform magnetically biased toward each other |
Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5051257A (en) * | 1989-05-09 | 1991-09-24 | Pietronigro Dennis D | Antineoplastic solution and method for treating neoplasms |
US5162115A (en) * | 1989-05-09 | 1992-11-10 | Pietronigro Dennis D | Antineoplastic solution and method for treating neoplasms |
US5851527A (en) * | 1988-04-18 | 1998-12-22 | Immunomedics, Inc. | Method for antibody targeting of therapeutic agents |
-
1998
- 1998-12-31 AU AU20245/99A patent/AU746153B2/en not_active Ceased
- 1998-12-31 WO PCT/US1998/027926 patent/WO1999033492A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 1998-12-31 JP JP2000526242A patent/JP2001527051A/en active Pending
- 1998-12-31 EP EP98965052A patent/EP1042004A4/en not_active Withdrawn
- 1998-12-31 CA CA002315092A patent/CA2315092A1/en not_active Abandoned
Patent Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5851527A (en) * | 1988-04-18 | 1998-12-22 | Immunomedics, Inc. | Method for antibody targeting of therapeutic agents |
US5051257A (en) * | 1989-05-09 | 1991-09-24 | Pietronigro Dennis D | Antineoplastic solution and method for treating neoplasms |
US5162115A (en) * | 1989-05-09 | 1992-11-10 | Pietronigro Dennis D | Antineoplastic solution and method for treating neoplasms |
Non-Patent Citations (1)
Title |
---|
See also references of EP1042004A4 * |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE10111486A1 (en) * | 2001-03-09 | 2002-10-02 | Ralph R Dawirs | Use of one or more neuroactive substances for the treatment of Parkinson's disease |
US8294757B2 (en) | 2007-06-26 | 2012-10-23 | Agency For Science, Technology And Research | Imaging chamber with window and micro-needle platform magnetically biased toward each other |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
WO1999033492A9 (en) | 1999-09-30 |
AU2024599A (en) | 1999-07-19 |
EP1042004A1 (en) | 2000-10-11 |
AU746153B2 (en) | 2002-04-18 |
CA2315092A1 (en) | 1999-07-08 |
JP2001527051A (en) | 2001-12-25 |
EP1042004A4 (en) | 2004-08-25 |
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