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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Bartus RT, Brown L, Wilson A, Kruegel B, Siffert J, Johnson EM, Kordower JH, Herzog CD. Properly scaled and targeted AAV2-NRTN (neurturin) to the substantia nigra is safe, effective and causes no weight loss: support for nigral targeting in Parkinson's disease. Neurobiol Dis. 2011 Oct;44(1):38-52. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: Cut to the Chase: Therapies Go Directly to Central Nervous System

Comment by:  William Frey II (Disclosure)
Submitted 27 January 2013  |  Permalink Posted 30 January 2013

It is understandable that this article does not mention direct intranasal delivery of therapies to the CNS, since it would, by comparison, make invasive delivery look somewhat less appealing. There is an entire literature about the use of noninvasive direct delivery of therapeutics from the nose to the brain (see, e.g., Lochhead et al., 2011, and Dhuria et al., 2010).

In 2012, the NIH selected intranasal insulin as a promising treatment for Alzheimer's disease and committed millions in funding to further test it nationally in additional Phase 2 clinical trials. I first developed (and patented) the non-invasive intranasal method for bypassing the blood-brain barrier to target therapeutics (including insulin) to the brain to treat neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease and stroke, and later expanded the specific use of intranasal insulin to target the brain to treat Alzheimer's disease and other CNS disorders. Even though these patents have now expired, interest in the intranasal insulin treatment continues to grow.

In 2004, Benedict et al. demonstrated...  Read more

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