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Rapid short-pulses of focused ultrasound and microbubbles deliver a range of agent sizes to the brain.

Authors: Lim Kee Chang W, Chan TG, Raguseo F, Mishra A, Chattenton D, de Rosales RTM, Long NJ, Morse SV

Focused ultrasound and microbubbles can non-invasively and locally deliver therapeutics and imaging agents across the blood-brain barrier. Uniform treatment and minimal adverse bioeffects are critical to achieve reliable doses and enable safe routine use of this technique. Towards these aims, we have previously designed a rapid short-pulse ultrasound sequence and used it to deliver a 3 kDa model agent to mouse brains. We observed a homogeneous distribution in delivery and blood-brain barrier closing within 10 min. However, many therapeutics and imaging agents are larger than 3 kDa, such as antibody fragments and antisense oligonucleotides. Here, we evaluate the feasibility of using rapid short-pulses to deliver higher-molecular-weight model agents. 3, 10 and 70 kDa dextrans were successfully delivered to mouse brains, with decreasing doses and more heterogeneous distributions with increasing agent size. Minimal extravasation of endogenous albumin (66.5 kDa) was observed, while immunoglobulin (~ 150 kDa) and PEGylated liposomes (97.9 nm) were not detected. This study indicates that rapid short-pulses are versatile and, at an acoustic pressure of 0.35 MPa, can deliver therapeutics and imaging agents of sizes up to a hydrodynamic diameter between 8 nm (70 kDa dextran) and 11 nm (immunoglobulin). Increasing the acoustic pressure can extend the use of rapid short-pulses to deliver agents beyond this threshold, with little compromise on safety. This study demonstrates the potential for deliveries of higher-molecular-weight therapeutics and imaging agents using rapid short-pulses.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To test whether rapid short-pulse focused ultrasound (RaSP) can safely and uniformly deliver higher-molecular-weight model agents across the mouse blood–brain barrier and define size thresholds at an acoustic pressure of 0.35 MPa.
Animal model / Human subject mouse, C57BL/6, 10–12 weeks, male
Disease model healthy
Targeted brain region(s) Striatum

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Rapid short-pulse (RaSP) FUS at 0.35 MPa achieved size-selective delivery of dextrans (3–70 kDa) with high spatial uniformity; increasing pressure to 0.53 MPa enabled nanoparticle (98 nm) delivery.
Duration of biological effect 2 h
Safety-related matter RaSP sequences showed superior safety compared to long pulses, with no IgG extravasation or tissue damage at 0.35 MPa, although clinical translation requires optimizing the high microbubble doses used.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument single-element focused ultrasound transducer (Vantage 256, Verasonics)
FUS Frequency 1.5 MHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure 0.35 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 0.0033 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 120 s
Treatment frequency single session

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