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Noninvasive ultrasonic induction of cerebrospinal fluid flow enhances intrathecal drug delivery

Authors :
Muna Aryal
Matine M. Azadian
Alex R. Hart
Nicholas Macedo
Quan Zhou
Eben L. Rosenthal
Raag D. Airan
Source :
Journal of Controlled Release. 349:434-442
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Intrathecal drug delivery is routinely used in the treatment and prophylaxis of varied central nervous system conditions, as doing so allows drugs to directly bypass the blood-brain barrier. However, the utility of this route of administration is limited by poor brain and spinal cord parenchymal drug uptake from the cerebrospinal fluid. We demonstrate that a simple noninvasive transcranial ultrasound protocol can significantly increase influx of cerebrospinal fluid into the perivascular spaces of the brain, to enhance the uptake of intrathecally administered drugs. Specifically, we administered small (~1 kDa) and large (~155 kDa) molecule agents into the cisterna magna of rats and then applied low, diagnostic-intensity focused ultrasound in a scanning protocol throughout the brain. Using real-time magnetic resonance imaging and ex vivo histologic analyses, we observed significantly increased uptake of small molecule agents into the brain parenchyma, and of both small and large molecule agents into the perivascular space from the cerebrospinal fluid. Notably, there was no evidence of brain parenchymal damage following this intervention. The low intensity and noninvasive approach of transcranial ultrasound in this protocol underscores the ready path to clinical translation of this technique. In this manner, this protocol can be used to directly bypass the blood-brain barrier for whole-brain delivery of a variety of agents. Additionally, this technique can potentially be used as a means to probe the causal role of the glymphatic system in the variety of disease and physiologic processes to which it has been correlated.

Details

ISSN :
01683659
Volume :
349
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Controlled Release
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6c6fd915a7a9a24cafd561e20fb5539
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2022.06.067