Pitt Shield

Spatio-temporal analysis of molecular delivery through the blood-brain barrier using focused ultrasound.

Authors: Choi JJ, Pernot M, Brown TR, Small SA, Konofagou EE

The deposition of gadolinium through ultrasound-induced blood-brain barrier (BBB) openings in the murine hippocampus was investigated. First, wave propagation simulations through the intact mouse skull revealed minimal beam distortion while thermal deposition simulations, at the same sonication parameters used to induce BBB opening in vivo, revealed temperature increases lower than 0.5 degrees C. The simulation results were validated experimentally in ex vivo skulls (m = 6) and in vitro tissue specimens. Then, in vivo mice (n = 9) were injected with microbubbles (Optison; 25-50 microl) and sonicated (frequency: 1.525 MHz, pressure amplitudes: 0.5-1.1 MPa, burst duration: 20 ms, duty cycle: 20%, durations: 2-4 shots, 30 s per shot, 30 s interval) at the left hippocampus, through intact skin and skull. Sequential, high-resolution, T1-weighted MRI (9.4 Tesla, in-plane resolution: 75 microm, scan time: 45-180 min) with gadolinium (Omniscan; 0.5 ml) injected intraperitoneally revealed a threshold of the BBB opening at 0.67 MPa and BBB closing within 28 h from opening. The contrast-enhancement area and gadolinium deposition path were monitored over time and the influence of vessel density, size and location was determined. Sonicated arteries, or their immediate surroundings, depicted greater contrast enhancement than sonicated homogeneous brain tissue regions. In conclusion, gadolinium was delivered through a transiently opened BBB and contained to a specific brain region (i.e., the hippocampus) using a single-element focused ultrasound transducer. It was also found that the amount of gadolinium deposited in the hippocampal region increased with the acoustic pressure and that the spatial distribution of the BBB opening was determined not only by the ultrasound beam, but also by the vasculature of the targeted brain region.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To characterize the spatial and temporal dynamics of molecular delivery across the blood–brain barrier using focused ultrasound.
Animal model / Human subject Mouse, C57BL/6, male
Disease model Healthy
Targeted brain region(s) Hippocampus
Cargo name and characteristics Gadolinium (Omniscan, 0.5 mL)
Route of administration intraperitoneal

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes BBBO in the hippocampus was achieved with optison and sonication, opening threshold was 0.67 Mpa and closed within 28 hours
Duration of biological effect 28 h
Safety-related matter Simulations at the sonication parameters predicted temperature increases <0.5 degrees, and MRI scans were used to check for tissue damage

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument 1.525 MHz
FUS Pressure 0.80 Mpa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 20 ms
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency Single

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