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Ultrasound cavitation therapy: inducing tumor drug delivery and blood flow changes with clinical ultrasound tools.

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Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society 2026 Vol.393() p. 114748 cited 1 OA Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applicat
TL;DR Theranostic approach using ultrasound cavitation with a clinical scanner and FDA-approved microbubbles to enhance vascular permeability and drug delivery in HCC demonstrates the feasibility of therapeutic cavitation with longer than previously evaluated acoustic pulses on a clinical scanner and clinically-approved microbubbles in HCC.
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PubMed DOI PMC OpenAlex Semantic 마지막 보강 2026-04-28
OpenAlex 토픽 · Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applications Ultrasound and Cavitation Phenomena Nanoparticle-Based Drug Delivery

Krolak C, De Koninck L, Gu S, Wang YN, Powers JE, Averkiou M

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Theranostic approach using ultrasound cavitation with a clinical scanner and FDA-approved microbubbles to enhance vascular permeability and drug delivery in HCC demonstrates the feasibility of therape

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APA Connor Krolak, Lance De Koninck, et al. (2026). Ultrasound cavitation therapy: inducing tumor drug delivery and blood flow changes with clinical ultrasound tools.. Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society, 393, 114748. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2026.114748
MLA Connor Krolak, et al.. "Ultrasound cavitation therapy: inducing tumor drug delivery and blood flow changes with clinical ultrasound tools.." Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society, vol. 393, 2026, pp. 114748.
PMID 41740923

Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the fourth leading cause of cancer-related deaths, remains difficult to treat due to underlying liver disease, abnormal tumor vasculature, elevated interstitial fluid pressure (IFP), and immune suppression. We developed a theranostic approach using ultrasound cavitation with a clinical scanner and FDA-approved microbubbles to enhance vascular permeability and drug delivery in HCC. Acute experiments were performed in a subcutaneous HCC mouse model using a modified Philips EPIQ scanner and S5-1 phased-array probe under two conditions: moderate (1.6 MPa) and high (2.2 MPa) peak negative pressures. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound was acquired before, during, and after treatment, and vascular changes were quantified using a novel maximum intensity projection time area curve (MIP-TAC) analysis. Passive cavitation detection monitored microbubble activity. Doxorubicin extravasation, IFP (with a pressure catheter), and histology were assessed. Both ultrasound conditions induced transient tumor perfusion loss and reduced IFP without significant tissue damage or hemorrhage. The high-pressure treatment caused the greatest perfusion loss, whereas enhanced doxorubicin delivery occurred under moderate pressure. This result is likely due to excessive tumor perfusion loss in the high-pressure group, impeding further drug transport. These results demonstrate the feasibility of therapeutic cavitation with longer than previously evaluated acoustic pulses (1000 cycles) on a clinical scanner and clinically-approved microbubbles in HCC. Moderate-pressure cavitation maximized drug extravasation, underscoring the need to balance transient tumor perfusion loss with drug delivery. This clinically translatable strategy has potential to improve therapeutic outcomes in human HCC.

MeSH Terms

Animals; Microbubbles; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular; Doxorubicin; Liver Neoplasms; Drug Delivery Systems; Ultrasonic Therapy; Mice; Antibiotics, Antineoplastic; Contrast Media; Cell Line, Tumor; Humans; Female