Nonthermal ablation with microbubble-enhanced focused ultrasound close to the optic tract without affecting nerve function.
Authors: McDannold N, Zhang YZ, Power C, Jolesz F, Vykhodtseva N
Tumors at the skull base are challenging for both resection and radiosurgery given the presence of critical adjacent structures, such as cranial nerves, blood vessels, and brainstem. Magnetic resonance imaging-guided thermal ablation via laser or other methods has been evaluated as a minimally invasive alternative to these techniques in the brain. Focused ultrasound (FUS) offers a noninvasive method of thermal ablation; however, skull heating limits currently available technology to ablation at regions distant from the skull bone. Here, the authors evaluated a method that circumvents this problem by combining the FUS exposures with injected microbubble-based ultrasound contrast agent. These microbubbles concentrate the ultrasound-induced effects on the vasculature, enabling an ablation method that does not cause significant heating of the brain or skull. In 29 rats, a 525-kHz FUS transducer was used to ablate tissue structures at the skull base that were centered on or adjacent to the optic tract or chiasm. Low-intensity, low-duty-cycle ultrasound exposures (sonications) were applied for 5 minutes after intravenous injection of an ultrasound contrast agent (Definity, Lantheus Medical Imaging Inc.). Using histological analysis and visual evoked potential (VEP) measurements, the authors determined whether structural or functional damage was induced in the optic tract or chiasm. Overall, while the sonications produced a well-defined lesion in the gray matter targets, the adjacent tract and chiasm had comparatively little or no damage. No significant changes (p > 0.05) were found in the magnitude or latency of the VEP recordings, either immediately after sonication or at later times up to 4 weeks after sonication, and no delayed effects were evident in the histological features of the optic nerve and retina. This technique, which selectively targets the intravascular microbubbles, appears to be a promising method of noninvasively producing sharply demarcated lesions in deep brain structures while preserving function in adjacent nerves. Because of low vascularity--and thus a low microbubble concentration--some large white matter tracts appear to have some natural resistance to this type of ablation compared with gray matter. While future work is needed to develop methods of monitoring the procedure and establishing its safety at deep brain targets, the technique does appear to be a potential solution that allows FUS ablation of deep brain targets while sparing adjacent nerve structures.
Introduction
Purpose
Other
Study Objective
To evaluate whether microbubble-enhanced focused ultrasound can noninvasively produce sharply demarcated lesions at skull-base deep brain targets while preserving adjacent nerve structures (optic tract/chiasm) in rats.
Animal model / Human subject
Rat (Rattus norvegicus), strain: Wistar, age: not specified, sex: male
MRI or image guidance method
MRI-guided
Targeted brain region(s)
optic chiasm
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Microbubble-enhanced focused ultrasound (525 kHz, low-intensity low-duty-cycle sonications for 5 minutes after IV Definity) produced sharply demarcated gray-matter lesions at the skull base while sparing adjacent optic tract/chiasm function (no significant VEP magnitude or latency changes up to 4 weeks) and showed relative resistance of large white-matter tracts due to low vascularity.
Duration of biological effect
4 weeks
Safety-related matter
No significant adverse effects were observed: sonications produced well-defined gray matter lesions with little or no damage to adjacent optic tract/chiasm and no significant changes in VEP magnitude or latency or delayed histological effects up to 4 weeks. The authors state that further work is needed to develop monitoring methods and to establish safety at deep brain targets.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
525-kHz Spherically curved, air-backed single element FUS transducer; manufacturer: None; aperture/diameter: None
FUS Frequency
525 kHz
FUS Pressure
0.174 MPa and 0.195 Mpa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
5 minutes
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 1 mm from the ventral brain surface; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
single session
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