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Lesion 3D modeling in transcranial MR-guided focused ultrasound thalamotomy.

Authors: López-Aguirre M, Caballero-Insaurriaga J, Urso D, Rodríguez-Rojas R, Máñez-Miró JU, Del-Alamo M, Rachmilevitch I, Martínez-Fernández R, Pineda-Pardo JA

Transcranial magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (tMRgFUS) allows to perform incisionless thermoablation of deep brain structures. This feature makes it a very useful tool for the treatment of multiple neurological and psychiatric disorders. Currently, feedback of the thermoablation process is based on peak temperature readings assessed on real-time two-dimensional MRI thermometry. However, an accurate methodology relating thermal dosimetry with three-dimensional topography and temporal evolution of the lesion is still to be defined, thus hurdling the establishment of well-defined, evidence-based criteria to perform safe and effective treatments. In here we propose threshold-based thermoablation models to predict the volumetric topography of the lesion (whole lesion and necrotic core) in the short-to-mid-term based on thermal dosimetry estimated from intra-treatment MRI thermometry. To define and validate our models we retrospectively analyzed the data of sixty-three tMRgFUS thalamotomies for treating tremor. We used intra-treatment MRI thermometry to estimate whole-treatment three-dimensional thermal dose maps, defined either as peak temperature reached (T<sub>max</sub>) or thermal isoeffective dose (TID). Those maps were thresholded to find the dosimetric level that maximize the agreement (Sorensen-Dice coefficient - SDc) with the boundaries of the whole lesion and its core, assessed on T2w images 1-day (post-24h) and 3-months (post-3M) after treatment. Best predictions were achieved for the whole lesion at post-24h (SDc = 0.71), with T<sub>max</sub> /TID over 50.0 °C/90.5 CEM43. The core at post-24h and whole lesion at post-3M lesions reported a similar behavior in terms of shape accuracy (SDc ~0.35), and thermal dose thresholds ~55 °C/4100.0 CEM43. Finally, the optimal levels for post-3M core lesions were 55.5 °C/5800.0 CEM43 (SDc = 0.21). These thermoablation models could contribute to the real-time decision-making process and improve the outcome of tMRgFUS interventions both in terms of safety and efficacy.

Introduction

Purpose thermal ablation
Study Objective Develop threshold-based thermoablation models to predict 3D topography and temporal evolution of lesions after transcranial MR-guided focused ultrasound thalamotomy using intra-treatment 2D MRI thermometry
Animal model / Human subject human
Disease model essential tremor, Parkinson's disease
MRI or image guidance method Yes (MRI)
Targeted brain region(s) Thalamus

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Optimal thresholds for predicting whole lesion at 24h post-op were 50.0°C (Tmax) or 49.5 CET1M (thermal dose), achieving Dice similarity 0.71 subject-level and 0.65 group-level. Core lesion at 24h required 56.0°C/55.0 CET1M. Mid-term (3 months) whole lesion predicted at 54.5°C/55.0 CET1M with lower accuracy (Dice ~0.30). Models tended to overestimate lesion boundaries, providing conservative safety margins.
Duration of biological effect 3 months (follow-up period)
Safety-related matter Model overestimates lesion boundaries, which is conservative for avoiding damage to neighboring structures (internal capsule, medial lemniscus). No specific adverse events reported in this study.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument ExAblate 4000 system (InSightec, Haifa, Israel)
Duration of a single FUS session none (not explicitly given(multiple sonications per treatment)
Treatment frequency single session

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