Focused Ultrasound-Mediated Blood-Brain Barrier Opening Increases Delivery and Efficacy of Etoposide for Glioblastoma Treatment.
Authors: Wei HJ, Upadhyayula PS, Pouliopoulos AN, Englander ZK, Zhang X, Jan CI, Guo J, Mela A, Zhang Z, Wang TJC, Bruce JN, Canoll PD, Feldstein NA, Zacharoulis S, Konofagou EE, Wu CC
Glioblastoma (GBM) is a devastating disease. With the current treatment of surgery followed by chemoradiation, outcomes remain poor, with median survival of only 15 months and a 5-year survival rate of 6.8%. A challenge in treating GBM is the heterogeneous integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which limits the bioavailability of systemic therapies to the brain. There is a growing interest in enhancing drug delivery by opening the BBB with the use of focused ultrasound (FUS). We hypothesize that an FUS-mediated BBB opening can enhance the delivery of etoposide for a therapeutic benefit in GBM. A murine glioma cell line (Pdgf<sup>+</sup>, Pten<sup>-/-</sup>, P53<sup>-/-</sup>) was orthotopically injected into B6(Cg)-Tyrc-2J/J mice to establish the syngeneic GBM model for this study. Animals were treated with FUS and microbubbles to open the BBB to enhance the delivery of systemic etoposide. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was used to evaluate the BBB opening and tumor progression. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry was used to measure etoposide concentrations in the intracranial tumors. The murine glioma cell line is sensitive to etoposide in vitro. MR imaging and passive cavitation detection demonstrate the safe and successful BBB opening with FUS. The combined treatment of an FUS-mediated BBB opening and etoposide decreased tumor growth by 45% and prolonged median overall survival by 6 days: an approximately 30% increase. The FUS-mediated BBB opening increased the brain tumor-to-serum ratio of etoposide by 3.5-fold and increased the etoposide concentration in brain tumor tissue by 8-fold compared with treatment without ultrasound. The current study demonstrates that BBB opening with FUS increases intratumoral delivery of etoposide in the brain, resulting in local control and overall survival benefits.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To determine whether focused ultrasound–mediated blood–brain barrier opening enhances delivery and therapeutic efficacy of etoposide in a murine glioblastoma model.
Animal model / Human subject
mouse, B6(Cg)-Tyrc-2J/J, 8–10 weeks, female
Disease model
glioblastoma (GBM)
MRI or image guidance method
MRI guidance
Targeted brain region(s)
10 Ms
Target coordinates
1000 ms
Cargo name and characteristics
etoposide
Route of administration
intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
FUS-mediated BBB opening increased intratumoral etoposide concentration 8-fold, leading to a 45% reduction in tumor growth and prolonged survival in GBM mice.
Duration of biological effect
6 days
Safety-related matter
The procedure was safe and monitored via passive cavitation detection (PCD), with no adverse effects or significant tissue damage reported.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
single-element focused ultrasound transducer
FUS Frequency
1.5 MHz
FUS Intensity
not reported
FUS Pressure
0.45 MPa
FUS Mode
not reported
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
60 s
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