Minimally invasive therapeutic ultrasound: Ultrasound-guided ultrasound ablation in neuro-oncology.
Authors: Belzberg M, Mahapatra S, Perdomo-Pantoja A, Chavez F, Morrison K, Xiong KT, Gamo NJ, Restaino S, Thakor N, Yazdi Y, Iyer R, Tyler B, Theodore N, Luciano MG, Brem H, Groves M, Cohen AR, Manbachi A
To improve patient outcomes (eg, reducing blood loss and infection), practitioners have gravitated toward noninvasive and minimally invasive surgeries (MIS), which demand specialized toolkits. Focused ultrasound, for example, facilitates thermal ablation from a distance, thereby reducing injury to surrounding tissue. Focused ultrasound can often be performed noninvasively; however, it is more difficult to carry out in neuro-oncological tumors, as ultrasound is dramatically attenuated while propagating through the skull. This shortcoming has prompted exploration of MIS options for intracranial placement of focused ultrasound probes, such as within the BrainPath™ (NICO Corporation, Indianapolis, IN). Herein, we present the design, development, and in vitro testing of an image-guided, focused ultrasound prototype designed for use in MIS procedures. This probe can ablate neuro-oncological lesions despite its small size. Preliminary prototypes were iteratively designed, built, and tested. The final prototype consisted of three 8-mm-diameter therapeutic elements guided by an imaging probe. Probe functionality was validated on a series of tissue-mimicking phantoms. Lesions were created in tissue-mimicking phantoms with average dimensions of 2.5 × 1.2 × 6.5 mm and 3.4 × 3.25 × 9.36 mm after 10- and 30-second sonification, respectively. 30 s sonification with 118 W power at 50% duty cycle generated a peak temperature of 68 °C. Each ablation was visualized in real time by the built-in imaging probe. We developed and validated an ultrasound-guided focused ultrasound probe for use in MIS procedures. The dimensional constraints of the prototype were designed to reflect those of BrainPath trocars, which are MIS tools used to create atraumatic access to deep-seated brain pathologies.
Introduction
Purpose
thermal ablation
Study Objective
Develop and validate an ultrasound-guided focused ultrasound probe for minimally invasive surgery in neuro-oncology.
Animal model / Human subject
probe phantom
Disease model
none (healthy phantom model
MRI or image guidance method
built-in ultrasound imaging (5.0 MHz linear array)
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
This study designed a USgFUS probe for use in the MIS (minimally invasive surgeries) procedures. Researchers also validated the design by successfully creating a target lesion in the brain phantom model with their device, proving its' feasbility of thermal ablation of brain tumor
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
two home designed and assembled transducers
FUS Frequency
1.5MHz (center frequency)
FUS Intensity
118W
(did not mention W/cm2)
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
5ms
Duration of a single FUS session
10s, and 30s
Focal Characteristics
FWHM bandwidth: 1.20-1.80MHz
Treatment frequency
single session 10s and 30s
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