Focused ultrasound combined with radiotherapy for malignant brain tumor: a preclinical and clinical study.
Authors: Chen KT, Huang CY, Pai PC, Yang WC, Tseng CK, Tsai HC, Li JC, Chuang CC, Hsu PW, Lee CC, Toh CH, Liu HL, Wei KC
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) remains to be the major obstacle to conquer in treating patients with malignant brain tumors. Radiation therapy (RT), despite being the mainstay adjuvant modality regardless of BBB, the effect of radiation induced cell death is hindered by the hypoxic microenvironment. Focused ultrasound (FUS) combined with systemic microbubbles has been shown not only to open BBB but also potentially increased regional perfusion. However, no clinical study has investigated the combination of RT with FUS-BBB opening (RT-FUS). We aimed to provide preclinical evidence of RT-FUS combination in GBM animal model, and to report an interim analysis of an ongoing single arm, prospective, pilot study (NCT01628406) of combining RT-FUS for recurrent malignant high grade glioma patients, of whom re-RT was considered for disease control. In both preclinical and clinical studies, FUS-BBB opening was conducted within 2 h before RT. Treatment responses were evaluated by objective response rate (ORR) using magnetic resonance imaging, progression free survival, and overall survival, and adverse events (AE) in clinical study. Survival analysis was performed in preclinical study and descriptive analysis was performed in clinical study. In mouse GBM model, the survival analysis showed RT-FUS (2 Gy) group was significantly longer than RT (2 Gy) group and control, but not RT (5 Gy) group. In the pilot clinical trial, an interim analysis of six recurrent malignant high grade glioma patients underwent a total of 24 RT-FUS treatments was presented. Three patients had rapid disease progression at a mean of 33 days after RT-FUS, while another three patients had at least stable disease (mean 323 days) after RT-FUS with or without salvage chemotherapy or target therapy. One patient had partial response after RT-FUS, making the ORR of 16.7%. There was no FUS-related AEs, but one (16.7%) re-RT-related grade three radiation necrosis. Reirradiation is becoming an option after disease recurrence for both primary and secondary malignant brain tumors since systemic therapy significantly prolongs survival in cancer patients. The mechanism behind the synergistic effect of RT-FUS in preclinical model needs further study. The clinical evidence from the interim analysis of an ongoing clinical trial (NCT01628406) showed a combination of RT-FUS was safe (no FUS-related adverse effect). A comprehensive analysis of radiation dosimetry and FUS energy distribution is expected after completing the final recruitment.
Introduction
Purpose
Other
Study Objective
To use full-wave simulations to analyze prior nonthermal transcranial focused ultrasound experiments in macaques and determine the causes of prefocal blood–brain barrier disruption and tissue damage.
Animal model / Human subject
Rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta); strain: not reported; age: not reported; sex: not reported
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
MRI-guided FUS (planning MRI with a 3T clinical MRI integrated ExAblate Neuro system); CT images were co-registered to MRI for skull modeling/registration; passive cavitation detectors used to determine exposure levels.
Targeted brain region(s)
optic tract
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Nonthermal low‑duty‑cycle burst transcranial FUS with intravenous microbubbles produced focal ablation near the skull base without thermal skull damage but also caused prefocal BBB disruption (estimated threshold 74–99 kPa) and hemorrhagic lesions consistent with ablation at ~277 kPa. Simulations indicated that phase‑only and phase+inverse‑amplitude aberration corrections (increasing peak pressure by ~5–10%), steering the focus to the array center (increasing peak ~13% and reducing side lobes), and using lower‑frequency PCD sensitivity (110 kHz vs 610 kHz) were beneficial, while nonlinear propagation and skull‑base reflections were negligible.
Safety-related matter
They observed blood–brain barrier (BBB) disruption and, in some cases, small areas of tissue damage/hemorrhagic lesions in the prefocal region (estimated BBB disruption thresholds 74–99 kPa; ablation/lesion threshold ≈277 kPa), possibly exacerbated by excessive exposure from suboptimal passive cavitation detector placement. No thermal damage to the skull was reported, and BBB disruption was not observed in the postfocal side lobes (potentially due to microbubble shielding).
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
ExAblate Neuro (InSightec) 220 kHz clinical prototype transcranial MRI-guided FUS system; 1024-element hemispherical phased-array (diameter: 30 cm)
FUS Frequency
220 kHz; 610 kHz (PCD resonant frequency, ±20 kHz); 110 kHz (subharmonic)
FUS Pressure
415-496 kPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
300 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: 15 cm; Aperture size: 30 cm
Treatment frequency
Multiple
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