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Transcranial pulsed ultrasound facilitates brain uptake of laronidase in enzyme replacement therapy for Mucopolysaccharidosis type I disease.

Authors: Hsu YH, Liu RS, Lin WL, Yuh YS, Lin SP, Wong TT

Mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I) is a debilitating hereditary disease characterized by alpha-L-iduronidase (IDUA) deficiency and consequent inability to degrade glycosaminoglycans. The pathological accumulation of glycosaminoglycans systemically results in severe mental retardation and multiple organ dysfunction. Enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant human alpha-L-iduronidase (rhIDU) improves the function of some organs but not neurological deficits owing to its exclusion from the brain by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). We divided MPS I mice into control group, enzyme replacement group with rhIDU 2.9 mg/kg injection, enzyme replacement with one-spot ultrasound treatment group, and enzyme replacement with two-spot ultrasound treatment group, and compare treatment effectiveness between groups. All ultrasound treatments were applied on left side brain. Evans blue was used to simulate the distribution of rhIDU in the brain. Transcranial pulsed weakly focused ultrasound combined with microbubbles facilitates brain rhIDU delivery in MPS I mice receiving systemic enzyme replacement therapy. With intravenously injected rhIDU 2.9 mg/kg, the IDUA enzyme activity on the ultrasound treated side of the cerebral hemisphere raised to 7.81-fold that on the untreated side and to 75.84% of its normal value. Evans blue simulation showed the distribution of the delivered drug was extensive, involving a large volume of the treated cerebral hemisphere. Two-spot ultrasound treatment scheme is more efficient for brain rhIDU delivery than one-spot ultrasound treatment scheme. Transcranial pulsed weakly focused ultrasound can open BBB extensively and facilitates brain rhIDU delivery. This novel technology may provide a new MPS I treatment strategy.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective Evaluate whether transcranial pulsed weakly focused ultrasound combined with microbubbles facilitates brain delivery of recombinant human alpha-L-iduronidase (laronidase) in MPS I mice
Animal model / Human subject MPS I mouse (B6.129S4-Idua tm1.1Kme) and C57BL/6, 19-31 g
Disease model Mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I, Hurler syndrome)
MRI or image guidance method Yes (stereotactic, no MRI)
Targeted brain region(s) Hemisphere (Extensive Area, Not A Single Focal Spot)
Target coordinates one-spot: 2 mm left lateral of bregma; two-spot: additional spots 1 mm anterior and posterior to that location
Cargo name and characteristics laronidase (recombinant human alpha-L-iduronidase, rhIDU), 83 kDa
Route of administration intravenous (tail vein)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes FUS (1 MHz, 0.56 MPa, 10 ms pulses, 1 Hz, 60 s) with microbubbles delivered laronidase to brain. One-spot: treated side IDUA activity 2.75× untreated side, reaching 30.9% of normal. Two-spot: 7.81× untreated side, reaching 75.8% of normal. Evans blue simulation showed diffuse distribution. No safety issues reported.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Panametrics A392S single-element transducer, 1 MHz, diameter 38 mm, radius of curvature 63.5 mm
FUS Frequency 1MHz
FUS Pressure 0.56MPa (peak negative pressuref)
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 10 ms (burst length)
Duration of a single FUS session 60s
Treatment frequency single session (one-spot or two-spot exposure)

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