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Pulsed-wave low-dose ultrasound hyperthermia selectively enhances nanodrug delivery and improves antitumor efficacy for brain metastasis of breast cancer.

Authors: Wu SK, Chiang CF, Hsu YH, Liou HC, Fu WM, Lin WL

The clinical application of chemotherapeutics for brain tumors remains a challenge due to limitation of blood-brain barrier/blood-tumor barrier (BBB/BTB). In this study, we investigated the effects of low-dose focused ultrasound hyperthermia (UH) on the delivery and therapeutic efficacy of pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) for brain metastasis of breast cancer. Murine breast cancer cells (4T1-luc2) expressing firefly luciferase were implanted into mouse striatum as a brain tumor model. The mice were intravenously injected with PLD with/without transcranial pulsed-wave/continuous-wave UH (pUH/cUH) treatment on day-6 after tumor implantation. pUH (frequency: 500kHz, PRF: 1000Hz, duty cycle: 50%) was conducted under equal acoustic power (2.2-Watt) and sonication duration (10-min) as cUH. The amounts of doxorubicin accumulated in the normal brain and tumor tissues were measured with fluorometry. The tumor growth responses for the control, pUH, PLD, PLD+cUH, and PLD+pUH groups were evaluated with IVIS. The PLD distribution and cell apoptosis were assessed with immunofluorescence staining. The results showed that pUH significantly enhanced the PLD delivery into brain tumors and the tumor growth was further inhibited by PLD+pUH without damaging the sonicated normal brain tissues. This indicates that low-dose transcranial pUH is a promising method to selectively enhance nanodrug delivery and improve the brain tumor treatment.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery WITHOUT BBB opening
Study Objective To evaluate whether pulsed-wave low-dose ultrasound hyperthermia can selectively enhance nanodrug delivery and improve antitumor efficacy for brain metastases of breast cancer.
Disease model Brain metastasis of breast cancer
Cargo name and characteristics Nanodrug (nanoparticle-based drug delivery system; nanoparticle)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Pulsed-wave low-dose ultrasound hyperthermia selectively increased nanodrug delivery to brain metastases of breast cancer and improved antitumor efficacy. The successful parameter tested was pulsed-wave low-dose ultrasound hyperthermia.
Safety-related matter The provided text (title only) contains no mention of safety issues, adverse effects, or statements that no adverse effects were observed.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

FUS Mode pulsed
Focal Characteristics focal depth: None; focal length: None; aperture size: None

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