Pitt Shield

Current non-invasive strategies for brain drug delivery: overcoming blood-brain barrier transport.

Authors: Zheng X, Yang J, Hou Y, Fang Y, Wu K, Song Y, Liu K, Zhu J

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a complex and dynamic structure that serves as a gatekeeper, restricting the migrations of most compounds and molecules from blood into the central nervous system (CNS). The BBB plays a crucial role in maintaining CNS physiological function and brain homeostasis. It can protect the CNS from the entrance of toxic and infectious agents, however, it also restricts the drug permeation into brain to play a therapeutic role. The BBB has been the biggest limiting hurdle to medications entering the brain excluding from the brain about 100% of large-molecule and more than 98% of all small-molecule neurotherapeutics. As a result, it is of inability for drug molecule to reach requisite concentrations within the brain. With the aim of enhancing drug permeability and efficacy, a variety of strategies have been developed: invasive approaches, such as intraarterial delivery, intrathecal delivery, or administrating directly the drug intraventricularly and intracerebrally; non-invasive approaches that take advantage of innate BBB functions, using prodrugs, focused ultrasound, intranasal administration or nanotechnology. Here we mainly review recent developments and challenges related to non-invasive BBB-crossing techniques, whose benefits include higher efficacy, easier application, less treatment burden, better patient acceptability, and adherence. Additionally, we also analyze the potential of non-invasive methods in the treatment of CNS disorders and render them as a most suitable platform for the management of neurological diseases.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To review current non-invasive strategies for delivering drugs to the brain by overcoming blood–brain barrier transport.

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes This review summarizes non-invasive strategies to enhance drug delivery across the blood–brain barrier (e.g., receptor-mediated transport, nanoparticles, and focused ultrasound) but does not report original experimental biological or behavioral outcomes; no specific focused ultrasound parameter sets were tested or reported as successful.
Safety-related matter The provided text contains no mention of safety or adverse effects. No adverse effects were reported.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None

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