AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to develop a semiautomatic method to estimate disruption of the blood-brain barrier in glioblastoma patients using an implantable ultrasound device, while also analyzing the correlation between ultrasound-induced signal enhancement (SUISE) and local acoustic pressure in the brain.!* -
  • Gd-enhanced MRI images were analyzed to evaluate contrast enhancement before and after ultrasound treatments, with volumes of SUISE calculated and compared against qualitative grades given by clinicians for validation purposes.!* -
  • The algorithm demonstrated high accuracy in predicting blood-brain barrier openings and showed a strong correlation between SUISE probability and local acoustic pressure, especially indicating greater enhancement in gray matter than in white matter, paving the way for future clinical

Article Abstract

Objective: One of the goals in this study was to set up a semiautomatic method to estimate blood-brain barrier disruption obtained in patients with glioblastoma by using an implantable, unfocused, ultrasound device. Another goal was to correlate the probability of significant ultrasound-induced signal enhancement (SUISE) with local acoustic pressure in the brain.

Methods: Gd-enhanced MR images acquired before and after ultrasound treatments were analyzed prospectively. The image sets were segmented, normalized, and coregistered to evaluate contrast enhancement. The volume of SUISE was calculated with voxels labeled as gray or white matter, in a cylindrical region of interest, and with enhancement above a given threshold. To validate the method, the resulting volumes of SUISE were compared to qualitative grades previously assigned by 3 clinicians for 40 ultrasound treatments in 15 patients. A parametric study was performed to optimize the algorithm prediction of the qualitative grades. The 3D acoustic field in the brain was estimated from measurements in water combined with simulations accounting for ultrasound attenuation in brain and overlaid on each MR image to correlate local acoustic pressure with the probability of SUISE (defined as enhancement > 10%).

Results: The algorithm predicted grade 2 or 3 and grade 3 openings with areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.831 and 0.995, respectively. The probability of SUISE was correlated with local acoustic pressure (R2 = 0.98) and was 3.33 times higher for gray matter than for white matter.

Conclusions: An algorithm for evaluating blood-brain barrier disruption was validated and can be used for future clinical trials to further understand and quantify this technique in humans.Clinical trial registration no.: NCT02253212 (clinicaltrials.gov).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2018.9.JNS182001DOI Listing

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