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Biomarkers and focused ultrasound: the future of liquid biopsy for brain tumor patients.

Authors: Rincon-Torroella J, Khela H, Bettegowda A, Bettegowda C

Despite advances in modern medicine, brain tumor patients are still monitored purely by clinical evaluation and imaging. Traditionally, invasive strategies such as open or stereotactic biopsies have been used to confirm the etiology of clinical and imaging changes. Liquid biopsies can enable physicians to noninvasively analyze the evolution of a tumor and a patient's response to specific treatments. However, as a consequence of biology and the current limitations in detection methods, no blood or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) brain tumor-derived biomarkers are used in routine clinical practice. Enhancing the presence of tumor biomarkers in blood and CSF via brain-blood barrier (BBB) disruption with MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a very compelling strategy for future management of brain tumor patients. A literature review on MRgFUS-enabled brain tumor liquid biopsy was performed using Medline/Pubmed databases and clinical trial registries. The therapeutic applications of MRgFUS to target brain tumors have been under intense investigation. At high-intensity, MRgFUS can ablate brain tumors and target tissues, which needs to be balanced with the increased risk for damage to surrounding normal structures. At lower-intensity and pulsed-frequency, MRgFUS may be able to disrupt the BBB transiently. Thus, while facilitating intratumoral or parenchymal access to standard or novel therapeutics, BBB disruption with MRgFUS has opened the possibility of enhanced detection of brain tumor-derived biomarkers. In this review, we describe the concept of MRgFUS-enabled brain tumor liquid biopsy and present the available preclinical evidence, ongoing clinical trials, limitations, and future directions of this application.

Introduction

Purpose Sonobiopsy
Study Objective To review the concept and evidence for using MRI-guided focused ultrasound to transiently disrupt the blood–brain barrier and thereby enhance detection of brain tumor biomarkers in liquid biopsies.
Disease model brain tumor
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes MRgFUS can transiently disrupt the blood–brain barrier to enhance release and detection of brain tumor biomarkers into blood/CSF, with reported successful parameters being low-intensity pulsed-frequency sonication for BBB disruption and high-intensity sonication for tumor ablation (the latter carrying higher risk to surrounding tissue).
Safety-related matter The paper notes that high-intensity MRgFUS can ablate brain tumors but carries an increased risk of damage to surrounding normal structures; lower-intensity pulsed MRgFUS can transiently disrupt the BBB to enhance biomarker detection, and optimization of FUS settings (depending on pathology and tumor location) is needed.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

FUS Mode pulsed
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None

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