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Nonthermal ablation in the rat brain using focused ultrasound and an ultrasound contrast agent: long-term effects.

Authors: McDannold N, Zhang Y, Vykhodtseva N

OBJECTIVE Thermal ablation with transcranial MRI-guided focused ultrasound (FUS) is currently under investigation as a less invasive alternative to radiosurgery and resection. A major limitation of the method is that its use is currently restricted to centrally located brain targets. The combination of FUS and a microbubble-based ultrasound contrast agent greatly reduces the ultrasound exposure level needed to ablate brain tissue and could be an effective means to increase the "treatment envelope" for FUS in the brain. This method, however, ablates tissue through a different mechanism: destruction of the microvasculature. It is not known whether nonthermal FUS ablation in substantial volumes of tissue can safely be performed without unexpected effects. The authors investigated this question by ablating volumes in the brains of normal rats. METHODS Overlapping sonications were performed in rats (n = 15) to ablate a volume in 1 hemisphere per animal. The sonications (10-msec bursts at 1 Hz for 60 seconds; peak negative pressure 0.8 MPa) were combined with the ultrasound contrast agent Optison (100 µl/kg). The rats were followed with MRI for 4-9 weeks after FUS, and the brains were examined with histological methods. RESULTS Two weeks after sonication and later, the lesions appeared as cyst-like areas in T2-weighted MR images that were stable over time. Histological examination demonstrated well-defined lesions consisting of a cyst-like cavity that remained lined by astrocytic tissue. Some white matter structures within the sonicated area were partially intact. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study indicate that nonthermal FUS ablation can be used to safely ablate tissue volumes in the brain without unexpected delayed effects. The findings are encouraging for the use of this ablation method in the brain.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To assess long term safety and tissue effects of microbubble assisted, nonthermal FUS ablation of brain tissue in rats
Animal model / Human subject Rat (Rattus norvegicus),Sprague-Dawley, age not specified, sex male (n=15)
Disease model healthy (normal rat brain)
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided
Targeted brain region(s) Thalamus

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Nonthermal microbubble-enhanced FUS produced stable cyst-like brain lesions lined by astrocytes with some white-matter preservation in rats, indicating safe volumetric ablation without unexpected delayed effects
Duration of biological effect 4–9 weeks
Safety-related matter Nonthermal FUS ablation produced well-defined, stable cyst-like lesions lined by astrocytic tissue (with some white matter structures partially intact). The authors report that these results indicate the method can safely ablate brain tissue volumes without unexpected delayed effects.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument 1.1 MHz FUS transducer driven with a function generator (33220A, Agilent), and amplifier (240 L, E&I)
FUS Frequency 1.1 MHz
FUS Pressure 0.8 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 60 seconds
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency Single session
Mechanical index 0.7627700713964738

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