| Literature DB >> 30674905 |
Todd Mainprize1, Nir Lipsman2,3, Yuexi Huang4, Ying Meng2,3, Allison Bethune3, Sarah Ironside5, Chinthaka Heyn6, Ryan Alkins7, Maureen Trudeau5, Arjun Sahgal5,8, James Perry5,9, Kullervo Hynynen4,10,11.
Abstract
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) has long limited therapeutic access to brain tumor and peritumoral tissue. In animals, MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) with intravenously injected microbubbles can temporarily and repeatedly disrupt the BBB in a targeted fashion, without open surgery. Our objective is to demonstrate safety and feasibility of MRgFUS BBB opening with systemically administered chemotherapy in patients with glioma in a phase I, single-arm, open-label study. Five patients with previously confirmed or suspected high-grade glioma based on imaging underwent the MRgFUS in conjunction with administration of chemotherapy (n = 1 liposomal doxorubicin, n = 4 temozolomide) one day prior to their scheduled surgical resection. Samples of "sonicated" and "unsonicated" tissue were measured for the chemotherapy by liquid-chromatography-mass spectrometry. Complete follow-up was three months. The procedure was well-tolerated, with no adverse clinical or radiologic events related to the procedure. The BBB within the target volume showed radiographic evidence of opening with an immediate 15-50% increased contrast enhancement on T1-weighted MRI, and resolution approximately 20 hours after. Biochemical analysis of sonicated versus unsonicated tissue suggest chemotherapy delivery is feasible. In this study, we demonstrated transient BBB opening in tumor and peritumor tissue using non-invasive low-intensity MRgFUS with systemically administered chemotherapy was safe and feasible. The characterization of therapeutic delivery and clinical response to this treatment paradigm requires further investigation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30674905 PMCID: PMC6344541 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-36340-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Overview of study.
Patient Demographics. Pathology as confirmed by post-surgical pathology report.
| Patient | Age | Sex | Location | Pathology | Presenting symptoms | Chemotherapy Delivered |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 56 | F | Right temporal | Grade III anaplastic astrocytoma | Seizures | IV liposomal Doxorubicin, 58 mg |
| 2 | 62 | M | Right parieto-occipital | Grade IV astrocytoma | Headache, visual changes | PO Temozolomide, 160 mg |
| 3 | 71 | M | Right temporal | Grade IV astrocytoma | Leg weakness, headache | PO Temozolomide, 140 mg |
| 4 | 57 | M | Right frontal | Grade IV astrocytoma | Seizures | PO Temozolomide, 140 mg |
| 5 | 33 | M | Right frontal | Grade III anaplastic astrocytoma | Previous craniotomy 2016, Seizures, recurrent tumor | PO Temozolomide, 140 mg |
Figure 2Axial T1-weighted post gadolinium MRI of patient one immediately after MRgFUS BBB disruption demonstrates contrast extravasation in the grid pattern (see enlargement) where sonication occurred. The contrast extravasation is discrete and precise. There is no evidence of edema secondary to the procedure.
Figure 3Sample T1 weighted post-gadolinium MRI from patient five obtained 30 days prior to BBB opening procedure (left), immediately following BBB disruption (middle) and 20 hours post BBB disruption (right). Ill-defined contrast enhancement is seen in the peritumoral region on images acquired immediately after MRgFUS (white arrows). This contrast enhancement has resolved in the peritumor region on the day 1 follow-up image indicating closure of the BBB. T2* sequence acquired immediately following BBB disruption for this patient show no evidence of microhemorrhages.
Summary of contrast enhancement and drug delivery after blood-brain barrier disruption.
| Patient | Sonicated volume (mm3) | Sonication power (W) | % Enhancement | Chemotherapy concentration in peritumor tissue | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sonicated (ng/mg) | unsonicated (ng/mg) | ||||
| 1 | 486 × 2 | 5–9 | 40 ± 11 | 0.22 | 0.15 |
| 2 | 486 × 4 | 6–7.5 | — | — | — |
| 3 | 486 × 5 | 8–10 | 50 ± 22 | — | — |
| 4 | 486 × 2 | 6–7.5 | 15 ± 5 | 3.47 × 10−4 | 0.45 × 10−4 |
| 5 | 486 × 5 | 4–15 | 35 ± 15 | — | — |
Percent enhancement is the signal intensity in sonicated tissue versus non-enhancing adjacent tissue of the ipsilateral hemisphere. The range of power is provided for the bouts of sonication delivered for each individual patient. Note patient one received intravenous liposomal doxorubicin, and patient two to five received oral temozolomide.
Key inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| Men or women 18 to 75 years, inclusive | Previously irradiated tumor or tumor site |