Temporal stability of lipid-shelled microbubbles during acoustically-mediated blood-brain barrier opening.
Authors: Pouliopoulos AN, Jimenez DA, Frank A, Robertson A, Zhang L, Kline-Schoder AR, Bhaskar V, Harpale M, Caso E, Papapanou N, Anderson R, Li R, Konofagou EE
Non-invasive blood-brain barrier (BBB) opening using focused ultrasound (FUS) is being tested as a means to locally deliver drugs into the brain. Such FUS therapies require injection of preformed microbubbles, currently used as contrast agents in ultrasound imaging. Although their behavior during exposure to imaging sequences has been well described, our understanding of microbubble stability within a therapeutic field is still not complete. Here, we study the temporal stability of lipid-shelled microbubbles during therapeutic FUS exposure in two timescales: the short time scale (i.e., μs of low-frequency ultrasound exposure) and the long time scale (i.e., days post-activation). We first simulated the microbubble response to low-frequency sonication, and found a strong correlation between viscosity and fragmentation pressure. Activated microbubbles had a concentration decay constant of 0.02 d<sup>-1</sup> but maintained a quasi-stable size distribution for up to 3 weeks (< 10% variation). Microbubbles flowing through a 4-mm vessel within a tissue-mimicking phantom (5% gelatin) were exposed to therapeutic pulses (f<sub>c</sub>: 0.5 MHz, peak-negative pressure: 300 kPa, pulse length: 1 ms, pulse repetition frequency: 1 Hz, n=10). We recorded and analyzed their acoustic emissions, focusing on emitted energy and its temporal evolution, alongside the frequency content. Measurements were repeated with concentration-matched samples (10<sup>7</sup> microbubbles/ml) on day 0, 7, 14, and 21 after activation. Temporal stability decreased while inertial cavitation response increased with storage time both <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i>, possibly due to changes in the shell lipid content. Using the same parameters and timepoints, we performed BBB opening in a mouse model (n=3). BBB opening volume measured through T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI was equal to 19.1 ± 7.1 mm<sup>3</sup>, 21.8 ± 14 mm<sup>3</sup>, 29.3 ± 2.5 mm<sup>3</sup>, and 38 ± 20.1 mm<sup>3</sup> on day 0, 7, 14, and 21, respectively, showing no significant difference over time (p-value: 0.49). Contrast enhancement was 24.9 ± 1.7 %, 23.7 ± 11.7 %, 28.9 ± 5.3 %, and 35 ± 13.4 %, respectively (p-value: 0.63). In conclusion, the in-house made microbubbles studied here maintain their capacity to produce similar therapeutic effects over a period of 3 weeks after activation, as long as the natural concentration decay is accounted for. Future work should focus on stability of commercially available microbubbles and tailoring microbubble shell properties towards therapeutic applications.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To investigate the temporal stability of lipid-shelled microbubbles during therapeutic focused ultrasound exposure across microsecond and multi-week timescales and assess how storage time affects their acoustic behavior and blood–brain barrier opening efficacy.
Animal model / Human subject
mouse, C57BL/6, 4–8 months, female
Disease model
healthy
MRI or image guidance method
Stereotactic targeting using a stereotaxic frame and a previously described metallic grid method (coordinates from lambdoid suture: +3 mm ventral, −2 mm lateral). In vitro phantom positioning used pulse-echo to place the focal volume.
Targeted brain region(s)
Caudate Putamen
Target coordinates
AP: not specified; ML: -2 mm (lateral); DV: +3 mm (ventral) relative to lambdoid suture
Cargo name and characteristics
Omniscan (gadodiamide) — gadolinium-based small-molecule MRI contrast agent (non-ionic linear Gd chelate), 200 μL administered intraperitoneally for T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI
Route of administration
intraperitoneal
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Focused ultrasound with in-house lipid-shelled microbubbles produced consistent blood–brain barrier opening in mice up to 21 days after microbubble activation (no significant change in opening volume or contrast enhancement), although microbubbles showed decreased temporal stability and increased inertial cavitation with storage time. Successful parameters/formulation were: transducer center frequency 0.5 MHz, peak-negative pressure 300 kPa, pulse length 1 ms, pulse repetition frequency 1 Hz (n=10 pulses per trial in vitro; 2-min sonication in vivo), using DSPC:DSPE-PEG2K molar ratio 9:1 microbubbles.
Duration of biological effect
3 weeks
Safety-related matter
No adverse effects or safety issues are reported in the excerpt; BBB opening was confirmed by contrast-enhanced MRI in all treated mice and opening volumes showed no significant differences over storage time.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
single-element FUS transducer (Sonic Concepts H-204)
FUS Frequency
0.5 MHz
FUS Intensity
not reported
FUS Pressure
0.3 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
120 s
Focal Characteristics
76.2 mm
Treatment frequency
multiple sessions
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