Effects of human tissue acoustic properties, abdominal wall shape, and respiratory motion on ultrasound-mediated hyperthermia for targeted drug delivery to pancreatic tumors.

IF 3
Michael Gray, Laura Spiers, Constantin Coussios
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background: PanDox is a Phase-1 trial of chemotherapeutic drug delivery to pancreatic tumors using ultrasound-mediated hyperthermia to release doxorubicin from thermally sensitive liposomes. This report describes trial-related hyperthermia simulations featuring: (i) new ultrasonic properties of human pancreatic tissues, (ii) abdomen deflections imposed by a water balloon, and (iii) respiration-driven organ motion.

Methods: Pancreas heating simulations were carried out using three patient body models. Pancreas acoustic properties were varied between values found in the literature and those determined from our human tissue study. Acoustic beam distortion was assessed with and without balloon-induced abdomen deformation. Target heating was assessed for static, normal respiratory, and jet-ventilation-controlled pancreas motion.

Results: Human pancreatic tumor attenuation is 63% of the literature values, so that pancreas treatments require commensurately higher input intensity to achieve adequate hyperthermia. Abdominal wall deformation decreased the peak field pressure by as much as 3.5 dB and refracted the focal spot by as much as 4.5 mm. These effects were thermally counteracted by sidelobe power deposition, so the net impact on achieving mild hyperthermia was small. Respiratory motion during moving beam hyperthermia produced localized regions overheated by more than 8.0 °C above the 4.0 °C volumetric goal. The use of jet ventilation reduced this excess to 0.7 °C and yielded temperature field uniformity that was nearly identical to having no respiratory motion.

Conclusion: Realistic modeling of the ultrasonic propagation environment is critical to achieving adequate mild hyperthermia without the use of real time thermometry for targeted drug delivery in pancreatic cancer patients.

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人体组织声学特性、腹壁形状和呼吸运动对超声介导的胰腺肿瘤靶向药物递送热疗的影响。
背景:PanDox是一项利用超声介导的热疗将阿霉素从热敏脂质体释放到胰腺肿瘤的化疗药物递送的一期试验。本报告描述了与试验相关的热疗模拟:(i)人体胰腺组织的新超声特性,(ii)由水球施加的腹部偏转,以及(iii)呼吸驱动的器官运动。方法:采用3种人体模型进行胰腺加热模拟。胰腺的声学特性在文献中发现的值和我们从人体组织研究中确定的值之间变化。在有和没有气球引起的腹部变形的情况下评估声束畸变。目标加热评估静态,正常呼吸和喷气通气控制的胰腺运动。结果:人类胰腺肿瘤衰减为文献值的63%,因此胰腺治疗需要相应的高输入强度才能达到足够的热疗。腹壁变形使峰值场压降低多达3.5 dB,并使焦点点折射多达4.5 mm。这些效应被旁瓣功率沉积热抵消,因此对实现轻度热疗的净影响很小。在移动束热疗过程中,呼吸运动导致局部区域过热超过4.0°C的容量目标。喷射通风的使用将这一过量减少到0.7°C,并产生了几乎与没有呼吸运动相同的温度场均匀性。结论:超声传播环境的真实建模对于胰腺癌患者在不使用实时测温的情况下获得足够的轻度热疗至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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