MRI Monitoring and Quantification of Ultrasound-Mediated Delivery of Liposomes Dually Labeled with Gadolinium and Fluorophore through the Blood-Brain Barrier.
Authors: Aryal M, Papademetriou I, Zhang YZ, Power C, McDannold N, Porter T
Magnetic resonance image-guided focused ultrasound has emerged as a viable non-invasive technique for the treatment of central nervous system-related diseases/disorders. Application of mechanical and thermal effects associated with focused transcranial ultrasound has been studied extensively in pre-clinical models, which has paved the way for clinical trials. However, in vivo treatment evaluation techniques on drug delivery application via blood-brain barrier opening has not been fully explored. Current treatment evaluation techniques via magnetic resonance imaging are hindered by systemic toxicity resulting from free gadolinium delivery. Here we propose a novel treatment evaluation strategy to overcome limitations by (i) synthesizing liposomes that are dually labeled with gadolinium, a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent, and rhodamine, a fluorophore; (ii) applying a focused ultrasound (FUS)-mediated BBB opening technique to deliver the liposomes across vascular barriers, achieving local gadolinium enhancement while reducing systemic and unwanted regional toxic effects associated with free gadolinium; and (iii) utilizing the MRI modality to confirm the delivery as it is already included in the FUS treatment in clinic. Liposomes were secondarily labeled with a fluorescent marker to confirm results obtained by MRI quantification postmortem. Two different sizes, 77.5 nm (group A) and 140 nm (group B), of gadolinium- and fluorescence-labeled liposomes were fabricated using thin-film hydration followed by extrusion methods and determined their stability up to 6 h under physiologic conditions. Gadolinium signal was detected on contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MRI 5 h after the delivery of liposomes via the BBB opening approach with an ultrasound pulse of 0.42 MPa (estimate in water) combined with microbubbles. MRI contrast was enhanced significantly in sonicated regions compared with non-sonicated regions of the brain. This was due to the accumulation of labeled liposomes, which was confirmed by detection of rhodamine fluorescence in histologic sections. The relative increase in MRI signal intensity was greater for smaller liposomes (mean diameter = 77.5 nm) than larger liposomes (mean diameter = 140 nm), which suggested a greater accumulation of the smaller liposomes in the brain after ultrasound-mediated opening of the BBB. Our findings suggest that the dual-labeled nanocarrier platform can be established, the FUS-mediated BBB opening approach can be used to deliver it through vascular barriers and MRI can be used to evaluate the extent of nanocarrier delivery.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To develop and evaluate an MR-imaging–based method for assessing focused ultrasound–mediated blood–brain barrier opening using dual gadolinium- and rhodamine-labeled liposomes to enable localized delivery while minimizing systemic gadolinium toxicity.
Animal model / Human subject
Mice; male
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
Magnetic Resonance Image-guided Focused Ultrasound (MRgFUS)
Cargo name and characteristics
Gadolinium- and rhodamine-dually labeled liposomes (nanoparticles); mean diameters 77.5 nm (Group A) and 140 nm (Group B); prepared by thin-film hydration and extrusion; used as MRI contrast agent (Gd) and fluorescent marker (rhodamine); stable up to 6 hours under physiological conditions.
Route of administration
Intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
FUS with microbubbles enabled BBB opening and localized delivery of dual Gd-/rhodamine liposomes that can be detected by MRI. Smaller liposomes showed greater accumulation than larger.
Duration of biological effect
24 hours
Safety-related matter
Authors note that using liposome-encapsulated gadolinium aims to reduce systemic and regional toxicities associated with free gadolinium; no treatment-related adverse effects or safety issues are reported in the text.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Air-backed, single element, 690-kHz focused piezoelectric transducer
FUS Frequency
690 kHz
FUS Pressure
0.42 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
60 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: 30 mm; Aperture size: 40 mm
Treatment frequency
Single
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