Investigating the effects of dexamethasone on blood-brain barrier permeability and inflammatory response following focused ultrasound and microbubble exposure.
Authors: McMahon D, Oakden W, Hynynen K
<b>Rationale</b>: Clinical trials are currently underway to test the safety and efficacy of delivering therapeutic agents across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) using focused ultrasound and microbubbles (FUS+MBs). While acoustic feedback control strategies have largely minimized the risk of overt tissue damage, transient induction of inflammatory processes have been observed following sonication in preclinical studies. The goal of this work was to explore the potential of post-sonication dexamethasone (DEX) administration as a means to mitigate treatment risk. Vascular permeability, inflammatory protein expression, blood vessel growth, and astrocyte activation were assessed. <b>Methods</b>: A single-element focused transducer (transmit frequency = 580 kHz) and Definity<sup>TM</sup> microbubbles were used to increase BBB permeability unilaterally in the dorsal hippocampi of adult male rats. Sonicating pressure was calibrated based on ultraharmonic emissions. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) was used to quantitatively assess BBB permeability at 15 min (baseline) and 2 hrs following sonication. DEX was administered following baseline imaging and at 24 hrs post-FUS+MB exposure. Expression of key inflammatory proteins were assessed at 2 days, and astrocyte activation and blood vessel growth were assessed at 10 days post-FUS+MB exposure. <b>Results</b>: Compared to saline-treated control animals, DEX administration expedited the restoration of BBB integrity at 2 hrs, and significantly limited the production of key inflammation-related proteins at 2 days, following sonication. Indications of FUS+MB-induced astrocyte activation and vascular growth were diminished at 10 days in DEX-treated animals, compared to controls. <b>Conclusions</b>: These results suggest that DEX provides a means of modulating the duration of BBB permeability enhancement and may reduce the risk of inflammation-induced tissue damage, increasing the safety profile of this drug-delivery strategy. This effect may be especially relevant in scenarios for which the goal of treatment is to restore or preserve neural function and multiple sonications are required.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To determine whether post-sonication dexamethasone administration can shorten blood–brain barrier permeability and reduce inflammation, vascular growth, and astrocyte activation following focused ultrasound with microbubbles.
Animal model / Human subject
Rat (Rattus norvegicus), strain Sprague Dawley, adult, male
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
MRI-guided (T2 weighted structural MRI for targeting; DCE-MRI with pre contrast T1 mapping for BBB permeability)
Targeted brain region(s)
Dorsal Hippocampus
Cargo name and characteristics
Gadobutrol (Gadovist; Gd-based MRI contrast agent, small molecule)
Route of administration
Intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Post‑sonication dexamethasone expedited restoration of BBB integrity and suppressed sonication‑induced inflammation (reduced ICAM1, MCP1, GFAP, VEGF) and subsequent small‑vessel angiogenesis/astrocyte activation. Effective FUS conditions used a 580 kHz single‑element transducer with Definity microbubbles, ramping PNP until ultraharmonic emissions (1.5ƒ/2.5ƒ) were detected (triggering PNP ≈362–388 kPa) then maintaining 50% of that pressure, with exposure‑average 2ƒ emissions strongly correlating with Ktrans.
Duration of biological effect
10 days
Safety-related matter
The paper notes that Acoustic control largely minimizes overt tissue damage, though transient inflammatory responses, astrocyte activation, and vascular growth were observed after FUS and MB. Post sonication dexamethasone accelerated BBB restoration and reduced these inflammation responses, suggesting potential safety.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
In house single-element focused transducer (FUS Instruments Inc.) (transmit frequency = 580 kHz); manufacturer: None; transducer aperture/diameter: None
FUS Frequency
580 kHz
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
2 minutes
Focal Characteristics
focal depth: None; focal length: None; aperture size: 75 mm
Treatment frequency
Single
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