Pitt Shield

Real-time, transcranial monitoring of safe blood-brain barrier opening in non-human primates.

Authors: Marquet F, Teichert T, Wu SY, Tung YS, Downs M, Wang S, Chen C, Ferrera V, Konofagou EE

The delivery of drugs to specific neural targets faces two fundamental problems: (1) most drugs do not cross the blood-brain barrier, and (2) those that do, spread to the entire brain. To date, there exists only one non-invasive methodology with the potential to solve these problems: selective blood-brain barrier (BBB) opening using micro-bubble enhanced focused ultrasound. We have recently developed a single-element 500-kHz spherical transducer ultrasound setup for targeted BBB opening in the non-human primate that does not require simultaneous MRI monitoring. So far, however, the targeting accuracy that can be achieved with this system has not been quantified systematically. In this paper, the accuracy of this system was tested by targeting caudate nucleus and putamen of the basal ganglia in two macaque monkeys. The average lateral targeting error of the system was ∼2.5 mm while the axial targeting error, i.e., along the ultrasound path, was ∼1.5 mm. We have also developed a real-time treatment monitoring technique based on cavitation spectral analysis. This technique also allowed for delineation of a safe and reliable acoustic parameter window for BBB opening. In summary, the targeting accuracy of the system was deemed to be suitable to reliably open the BBB in specific sub-structures of the basal ganglia even in the absence of MRI-based verification of opening volume and position. This establishes the method and the system as a potentially highly useful tool for brain drug delivery.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To quantify the targeting accuracy and establish safe, real-time monitoring parameters of a single-element 500-kHz focused ultrasound system for MRI-independent, microbubble-enhanced blood–brain barrier opening in non-human primates.
Animal model / Human subject monkey, rhesus macaque, adult, male
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method Stereotactic targeting using a Kopf stereotaxic frame/manipulator guided by individual T1-weighted stereotaxic MRI; custom software (stereotax.R) converted manipulator settings to stereotaxic coordinates and projected the predicted ultrasound focus onto the MRI.
Targeted brain region(s) Striatum
Cargo name and characteristics Gadodiamide (Omniscan) — a gadolinium-based T1 MRI contrast agent (small-molecule paramagnetic chelate) used IV at 0.15 ml/kg to visualize blood–brain barrier disruption; does not cross an intact BBB.
Route of administration intracerebral

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes A single-element 500-kHz FUS system achieved targeted, MRI-independent BBB opening in rhesus macaques with high accuracy (~2.5 mm) using individual stereotactic guidance.
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter The gene delivery was focal and limited to the sonicated area; no significant systemic toxicity or off-target gene expression was reported at the optimized acoustic pressures.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument single-element focused ultrasound transducer (H-107, Sonic Concepts)
FUS Frequency 500 kHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure 0.30 MPa
FUS Mode not reported
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 120 s
Treatment frequency single session
Mechanical index 0.42426406871192845

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