Pitt Shield

Submicron-bubble-enhanced focused ultrasound for blood-brain barrier disruption and improved CNS drug delivery.

Authors: Fan CH, Liu HL, Ting CY, Lee YH, Huang CY, Ma YJ, Wei KC, Yen TC, Yeh CK

The use of focused ultrasound (FUS) with microbubbles has been proven to induce transient blood-brain barrier opening (BBB-opening). However, FUS-induced inertial cavitation of microbubbles can also result in erythrocyte extravasations. Here we investigated whether induction of submicron bubbles to oscillate at their resonant frequency would reduce inertial cavitation during BBB-opening and thereby eliminate erythrocyte extravasations in a rat brain model. FUS was delivered with acoustic pressures of 0.1-4.5 MPa using either in-house manufactured submicron bubbles or standard SonoVue microbubbles. Wideband and subharmonic emissions from bubbles were used to quantify inertial and stable cavitation, respectively. Erythrocyte extravasations were evaluated by in vivo post-treatment magnetic resonance susceptibility-weighted imaging, and finally by histological confirmation. We found that excitation of submicron bubbles with resonant frequency-matched FUS (10 MHz) can greatly limit inertial cavitation while enhancing stable cavitation. The BBB-opening was mainly caused by stable cavitation, whereas the erythrocyte extravasation was closely correlated with inertial cavitation. Our technique allows extensive reduction of inertial cavitation to induce safe BBB-opening. Furthermore, the safety issue of BBB-opening was not compromised by prolonging FUS exposure time, and the local drug concentrations in the brain tissues were significantly improved to 60 times (BCNU; 18.6 µg versus 0.3 µg) by using chemotherapeutic agent-loaded submicron bubbles with FUS. This study provides important information towards the goal of successfully translating FUS brain drug delivery into clinical use.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To determine whether resonant-frequency focused ultrasound excitation of in-house submicron bubbles can reduce inertial cavitation and erythrocyte extravasation while enabling safe, effective blood–brain barrier opening and enhanced local drug delivery in a rat model.
Animal model / Human subject rat, Sprague-Dawley, 250–300 g, male
Disease model healthy
Targeted brain region(s) Striatum
Cargo name and characteristics BCNU
Route of administration intravenous

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Resonant 10-MHz FUS with submicron bubbles (~350 nm) achieved a 60-fold increase in local BCNU delivery via stable cavitation-mediated BBBO without erythrocyte extravasation.
Duration of biological effect 4 min
Safety-related matter High-frequency FUS (10 MHz) significantly minimized inertial cavitation and hemorrhagic damage compared to 1 MHz; safe BBBO was maintained even at high pressures (up to 4.5 MPa) with minimal apoptosis.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument single-element focused ultrasound transducer (10 MHz)
FUS Frequency 10 MHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure 1.0 MPa
FUS Mode not reported
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 4 min
Treatment frequency single
Mechanical index 0.31622776601683794

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