Glass J P, Lee Y Y, Bruner J, Fields W S
Medicine (Baltimore). 1986 May;65(3):154-62.
The etiology and pathogenesis of treatment-related leukoencephalopathy remain obscure. The evidence is substantial, however, that radiation therapy in combination with higher cerebral concentrations of certain chemotherapeutic agents such as MTX increases the likelihood of permanent damage. There is no therapy of apparent benefit for treatment-related leukoencephalopathy, but reasonable alternatives include 1) withholding chemotherapy and/or radiation, 2) administering calcium leucovorin in high doses intravenously in methotrexate-induced leukoencephalopathy (26), or 3) perfusing the subarachnoid space (2) from above through an Ommaya reservoir and out from below through a lumbar puncture needle or lumbar subarachnoid catheter. Because CT scan abnormalities and subtle mental or intellectual changes are often noted before the full-blown clinical presentation, a prospective study involving periodic CT scanning as well as formal neuropsychologic testing appears worthwhile in all patients who are to receive cranial irradiation and/or chemotherapy in the prophylaxis or active treatment of CNS disease in order to detect and perhaps even to prevent this adverse side effect of cancer therapy.