From Focused Ultrasound Tumor Ablation to Brain Blood Barrier Opening for High Grade Glioma: A Systematic Review.
Authors: Paun L, Moiraghi A, Jannelli G, Nouri A, DiMeco F, Pallud J, Meling TR, Momjian S, Schaller K, Prada F, Migliorini D
Focused Ultrasound (FUS) is gaining a therapeutic role in neuro-oncology considering its novelty and non-invasiveness. Multiple pre-clinical studies show the efficacy of FUS mediated ablation and Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB) opening in high-grade glioma (HGG), but there is still poor evidence in humans, mainly aimed towards assessing FUS safety. With this systematic review our aim is, firstly, to summarize how FUS is proposed for human HGG treatment. Secondly, we focus on future perspectives and new therapeutic options. Using PRISMA 2020 guidelines, we reviewed case series and trials with description of patient characteristics, pre- and post-operative treatments and FUS outcomes. We considered nine case series (five about tumor ablation and four about BBB opening) with FUS-treated HGG patients between 1991 and 2021. Sixty-eight patients were considered in total, mostly males (67.6%), with a mean age of 50.5 ± 15.3 years old. Major complication rates were found in the tumor ablation group (26.1%). FUS has been rarely applied for direct tumoral ablation in human HGG patients with controversial results, but at the best of current studies, FUS-mediated BBB opening is showing good results with very low complication rates, paving the way for a new reliable technique to improve local chemotherapy delivery and antitumoral immune response. FUS can become a complementary technique to surgical resection and standard radiochemotherapy in recurrent HGG. Ongoing trials could provide in the near future more data on FUS-mediated BBB opening impact on progression-free survival, overall survival and potential drug-delivery capacities.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening (review)
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
This systematic review included 9 case series (68 patients, mean age 50.5 years, 67.6% male) on focused ultrasound for high-grade glioma. Five studies (23 patients) used tumor ablation (high-intensity FUS), with major complication rate 26.1% (hematomas, unwanted lesions). Four studies (45 patients) used BBB opening (low-intensity FUS with microbubbles, devices: SonoCloud, ExAblate, NaviFUS), with 0% major complications and mean follow-up 13.7 months. BBB opening appears safe, feasible, and promising for enhancing chemotherapy delivery. Ongoing trials are evaluating FUS-mediated BBB opening for carboplatin, paclitaxel, panobinostat, and other agents.
Brain Region
Targeted brain region(s)
Not specified
Ultrasound Parameters
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