Intracranial Sonodynamic Therapy With 5-Aminolevulinic Acid and Sodium Fluorescein: Safety Study in a Porcine Model.
Authors: Raspagliesi L, D'Ammando A, Gionso M, Sheybani ND, Lopes MB, Moore D, Allen S, Gatesman J, Porto E, Timbie K, Franzini A, Di Meco F, Sheehan J, Xu Z, Prada F
Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) is an emerging ultrasound-based treatment modality for malignant gliomas which combines ultrasound with sonosensitizers to produce a localized cytotoxic and modulatory effect. Tumor-specificity of the treatment is achieved by the selective extravasation and accumulation of sonosensitizers in the tumor-bearing regions. The aim of this study is to demonstrate the safety of low-intensity ultrasonic irradiation of healthy brain tissue after the administration of FDA-approved sonosensitizers used for SDT in experimental studies in an <i>in vivo</i> large animal model. In vivo safety of fluorescein (Na-Fl)- and 5 aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA)-mediated low-intensity ultrasound irradiation of healthy brain parenchyma was assessed in two sets of four healthy swine brains, using the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided Insightec ExAblate 4000 220 kHz system. After administration of the sonosensitizers, a wide fronto-parietal craniotomy was performed in pig skulls to allow transmission of ultrasonic beams. Sonication was performed on different spots within the thalamus and periventricular white matter with continuous thermal monitoring. Sonication-related effects were investigated with MRI and histological analysis. Post-treatment MRI images acquired within one hour following the last sonication, on day one, and day seven did not visualize any sign of brain damage. On histopathology, no signs of necrosis or apoptosis attributable to the ultrasonic treatments were shown in target areas. The results of the present study suggest that either Na-FL or 5-ALA-mediated sonodynamic therapies under MRI-guidance with the current acoustic parameters are safe towards healthy brain tissue in a large <i>in vivo</i> model. These results further support growing interest in clinical translation of sonodynamic therapy for intracranial gliomas and other brain tumors.
Introduction
Purpose
Other
Study Objective
To demonstrate the feasibility and safety of 5-aminolevulinic acid- and sodium fluorescein-mediated low-intensity MRI-guided sonodynamic therapy on healthy brain tissue in a large in vivo swine model.
Animal model / Human subject
Swine (pig), strain not specified, age not specified, sex not specified
Disease model
healthy
MRI or image guidance method
MRI-guided (Insightec ExAblate 4000 220 kHz)
Targeted brain region(s)
Thalamus
Cargo name and characteristics
Fluorescein sodium (Na-Fl) — FDA‑approved small-molecule fluorescent dye used here as a sonosensitizer; 5‑Aminolevulinic acid (5‑ALA) — FDA‑approved small‑molecule prodrug that is metabolized to protoporphyrin IX (a photosensitizer/sonosensitizer).
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
In a porcine model, MRI-guided sonodynamic therapy with 5-ALA or sodium fluorescein using low-intensity 220 kHz focused ultrasound (10 ms pulses at 10% duty cycle, ~4×10 mm spot size, apodized ~80%, rastered 10-subspot steering delivering ~20 min per target) caused no clinical, radiological, or histopathological damage to healthy brain tissue.
Duration of biological effect
1 hour, 40 minutes
Safety-related matter
No clinical, radiological, or histopathological evidence of brain injury attributable to Na‑Fl or 5‑ALA-mediated sonodynamic therapy was observed (no necrosis, apoptosis, edema or hematoma in treated sites). One animal sustained a procedural scalp‑closure injury and several specimens showed terminal‑event or incidental subarachnoid/intraparenchymal hemorrhages that were not attributed to the sonication.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Insightec ExAblate 4000 220 kHz system (Insightec); transducer aperture/diameter: None
FUS Frequency
220 kHz
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
Multiple
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