Pitt Shield

Noninvasive hippocampal blood-brain barrier opening in Alzheimer's disease with focused ultrasound.

Authors: Rezai AR, Ranjan M, D'Haese PF, Haut MW, Carpenter J, Najib U, Mehta RI, Chazen JL, Zibly Z, Yates JR, Hodder SL, Kaplitt M

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) presents a significant challenge for treating brain disorders. The hippocampus is a key target for novel therapeutics, playing an important role in Alzheimer's disease (AD), epilepsy, and depression. Preclinical studies have shown that magnetic resonance (MR)-guided low-intensity focused ultrasound (FUS) can reversibly open the BBB and facilitate delivery of targeted brain therapeutics. We report initial clinical trial results evaluating the safety, feasibility, and reversibility of BBB opening with FUS treatment of the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex (EC) in patients with early AD. Six subjects tolerated a total of 17 FUS treatments with no adverse events and neither cognitive nor neurological worsening. Post-FUS contrast MRI revealed immediate and sizable hippocampal parenchymal enhancement indicating BBB opening, followed by BBB closure within 24 h. The average opening was 95% of the targeted FUS volume, which corresponds to 29% of the overall hippocampus volume. We demonstrate that FUS can safely, noninvasively, transiently, reproducibly, and focally mediate BBB opening in the hippocampus/EC in humans. This provides a unique translational opportunity to investigate therapeutic delivery in AD and other conditions.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To evaluate the safety, feasibility, and reversibility of MR-guided low-intensity focused ultrasound (FUS) to open the blood–brain barrier in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex of patients with early Alzheimer's disease.
Animal model / Human subject Human (Homo sapiens), 55-73 years old, 5 females and 1 male
Disease model Alzheimer's disease
MRI or image guidance method MR-guided
Targeted brain region(s) Hippocampus And Entorhinal Cortex

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes MR-guided low-intensity FUS successfully and reproducibly opened the BBB in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex of early AD patients. BBB closure occurred within 24 hours with no observed cognitive or neurological worsening.
Duration of biological effect 24 h
Safety-related matter No treatment-related adverse events, hemorrhage, or cognitive/neurological worsening were observed up to 15 months post-treatment, and all participants tolerated the procedure well.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument ExAblate Neuro Type 2 (INSIGHTEC) helmet with 1,024 transducers
FUS Frequency 220 kHz
Treatment frequency 3 sessions

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