Drug delivery to subcortical regions is susceptible to the blood-brain barrier (BBB) impeding the molecular exchange between the blood stream and the brain parenchyma. Focused ultrasound (FUS) coupled with the administration of microbubbles has been proved to open the BBB locally, transiently, and noninvasively both in rodents and in nonhuman-primates (NHPs). The development of this disruption technique independent of MRI monitoring is of primordial importance yet restrained to the targeting optimization. This paper establishes the linear relationship of the incidence angle with the volume of BBB opening ( V ) and the peak negative pressure when sonicating the caudate nucleus and the putamen region of five NHPs. In addition, the effect of central nervous system structures on the opening morphology is evaluated by identification of the gray-to-white-matter ratio at the opening site. Finally, the targeting accuracy is assessed through the estimation of the geometric and angle shift of the opening from the targeted region. Interestingly, results prove a monotonic increase of the opening volume with close to normal incidence angles. Moreover, 80.35% of the opening lies on gray-matter regions compared with only 19.41% attributed to the white matter. The opening was found to be shifted axially, toward the transducer, and laterally with an average angle shift of 4.5°. Finally, we were capable of showing reproducibility of targeting accuracy with the same stereotactic and ultrasonic parameters. This paper documents the a priori prediction of the opening volume through manipulation of the angle and pressure as well as establishing the predictability, accuracy, and safety of FUS-induced BBB opening in NHPs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5542068PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TUFFC.2017.2681695DOI Listing

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