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Focused ultrasound mediated blood-brain barrier opening is safe and feasible in a murine pontine glioma model.

Authors: Englander ZK, Wei HJ, Pouliopoulos AN, Bendau E, Upadhyayula P, Jan CI, Spinazzi EF, Yoh N, Tazhibi M, McQuillan NM, Wang TJC, Bruce JN, Canoll P, Feldstein NA, Zacharoulis S, Konofagou EE, Wu CC

Drug delivery in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma is significantly limited by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Focused ultrasound (FUS), when combined with the administration of microbubbles can effectively open the BBB permitting the entry of drugs across the cerebrovasculature into the brainstem. Given that the utility of FUS in brainstem malignancies remains unknown, the purpose of our study was to determine the safety and feasibility of this technique in a murine pontine glioma model. A syngeneic orthotopic model was developed by stereotactic injection of PDGF-B<sup>+</sup>PTEN<sup>-/-</sup>p53<sup>-/-</sup> murine glioma cells into the pons of B6 mice. A single-element, spherical-segment 1.5 MHz ultrasound transducer driven by a function generator through a power amplifier was used with concurrent intravenous microbubble injection for tumor sonication. Mice were randomly assigned to control, FUS and double-FUS groups. Pulse and respiratory rates were continuously monitored during treatment. BBB opening was confirmed with gadolinium-enhanced MRI and Evans blue. Kondziela inverted screen testing and sequential weight lifting measured motor function before and after sonication. A subset of animals were treated with etoposide following ultrasound. Mice were either sacrificed for tissue analysis or serially monitored for survival with daily weights. FUS successfully caused BBB opening while preserving normal cardiorespiratory and motor function. Furthermore, the degree of intra-tumoral hemorrhage and inflammation on H&E in control and treated mice was similar. There was also no difference in weight loss and survival between the groups (p > 0.05). Lastly, FUS increased intra-tumoral etoposide concentration by more than fivefold. FUS is a safe and feasible technique for repeated BBB opening and etoposide delivery in a preclinical pontine glioma model.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To determine whether focused ultrasound combined with microbubbles can safely and feasibly open the blood–brain barrier and enhance drug delivery in a murine pontine glioma model.
Animal model / Human subject mouse, C57BL/6, 8 weeks, female
Disease model diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma
Targeted brain region(s) Pons
Cargo name and characteristics etoposide
Route of administration intravenous

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Focused ultrasound (1.5 MHz) with microbubbles safely opened the BBB in a murine DIPG model, increasing intratumoral etoposide concentration ~8-fold.
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter The procedure was well tolerated with preserved motor and cardiorespiratory functions; BBB closed within 72 h with no evidence of hemorrhage, inflammation, or reduced survival

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 pulsed
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 120 s
Treatment frequency multiple sessions

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