Multiple treatments with liposomal doxorubicin and ultrasound-induced disruption of blood-tumor and blood-brain barriers improve outcomes in a rat glioma model.
Authors: Aryal M, Vykhodtseva N, Zhang YZ, Park J, McDannold N
The blood-brain-barrier (BBB) prevents the transport of most anticancer agents to the central nervous system and restricts delivery to infiltrating brain tumors. The heterogeneous vascular permeability in tumor vessels, along with several other factors, creates additional barriers for drug treatment of brain tumors. Focused ultrasound (FUS), when combined with circulating microbubbles, is an emerging noninvasive method to temporarily permeabilize the BBB and the "blood-tumor barrier". Here, we tested the impact of three weekly sessions of FUS and liposomal doxorubicin (DOX) in 9L rat glioma tumors. Animals that received FUS+DOX (N=8) had a median survival time that was increased significantly (P<0.001) compared to animals who received DOX only (N=6), FUS only (N=8), or no treatment (N=7). Median survival for animals that received FUS+DOX was increased by 100% relative to untreated controls, whereas animals who received DOX alone had only a 16% improvement. Animals who received only FUS showed no improvement. No tumor cells were found in histology in 4/8 animals in the FUS+DOX group, and in two animals, only a few tumor cells were detected. Adverse events in the treatment group included skin toxicity, impaired activity, damage to surrounding brain tissue, and tissue loss at the tumor site. In one animal, intratumoral hemorrhage was observed. These events are largely consistent with known side effects of doxorubicin and with an extensive tumor burden. Overall this work demonstrates that multiple sessions using this FUS technique to enhance the delivery of liposomal doxorubicin have a pronounced therapeutic effect in this rat glioma model.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To evaluate whether repeated focused ultrasound-mediated blood–brain barrier disruption enhances delivery and therapeutic efficacy of liposomal doxorubicin in a 9L rat glioma model.
Animal model / Human subject
rat, Fischer 344, not reported, female
Disease model
glioma
MRI or image guidance method
MRI guidance
Targeted brain region(s)
Striatum
Cargo name and characteristics
nanoparticle
Route of administration
intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Weekly FUS-mediated BBB opening doubled median survival in a rat glioma model by significantly enhancing liposomal doxorubicin delivery.
Duration of biological effect
not reported
Safety-related matter
the treatment caused skin toxicity and some surrounding brain damage, likely due to doxorubicin accumulation and tumor burden.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
single-element focused ultrasound transducer
FUS Frequency
1.63 MHz
FUS Intensity
not reported
FUS Pressure
0.8 MPa
FUS Mode
not reported
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
20 s
Treatment frequency
multiple sessions
Mechanical index
0.6266083599903659
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