Brain barrier opened for first time to treat cancer
Brain
barrier opened for first time to treat cancer
Posted
by: Dr. Deepak Kumar
For the first time,
doctors have opened and closed the brain's protector – the blood-brain barrier
– on demand. The breakthrough will allow drugs to reach diseased areas of the
brain that are otherwise out of bounds. Ultimately, it could make it easier to
treat conditions such as Alzheimer's and brain cancer.
The
blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a sheath of cells that wraps around blood vessels
(in black) throughout the brain. It protects precious brain tissue from toxins
in the bloodstream, but it is a major obstacle for treating brain disorders
because it also blocks the passage of drugs.
Several
teams have opened the barrier in animals to sneak drugs through. Now
Michael Canney at Paris-based medical start-up CarThera, and his colleagues
have managed it in people using an ultrasound brain implant and an injection of
microbubbles.
When
ultrasound waves meet microbubbles in the blood, they make the bubbles vibrate.
This pushes apart the cells of the BBB.
With
surgeon Alexandre Carpentier at Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris, Canney
tested the approach in people with a recurrence of glioblastoma, the most
aggressive type of brain tumour. People with this cancer have surgery to remove
the tumours and then chemotherapy drugs, such as Carboplatin, are used to try
to kill any remaining tumour cells. Tumours make the BBB leaky, allowing in a
tiny amount of chemo drugs: if more could get through, their impact would be
greater, says Canney.
The
team tested the idea on four patients by implanting an ultrasound transducer
through a hole already made in their skulls during tumour-removal surgery. They
were then given an injection of microbubbles and had the transducer switched on
for 2 minutes. This sent low-intensity pulses of ultrasound into a region of
the brain measuring 1 centimetre by 5 centimetres. Canney reckons this makes
the BBB in this region more permeable for about 6 hours. In this time window,
each person received normal chemotherapy.
Since
July, they have performed the technique once a month on each of the four
patients. It will be a few months before Canney can determine the effect on
tumours.
An
MRI scan showed that a marker chemical, injected along with the microbubbles,
was crossing the BBB. "We hope this means the chemotherapy drug is doing
the same thing," says Canney, who presented his observations last week at the Focused Ultrasound
symposium in North Bethesda, Maryland.
There
may be an additional benefit. Animal models of Alzheimer's suggests that merely
opening up the barrier – with no added drugs – results in a reduction in the
protein plaques associated with the disease. It may be that when the barrier
opens, immune cells can mount an attack.
A
similar immune response might help attack cancerous cells, Canney suggests.
"We think we will have a significant effect on these tumours."
This article appeared in print
under the headline "Blood-brain barrier opened on demand"
Correction, 23 October
2014: When this article was first published on 22 October 2014, the
stated size of the region of the brain being pulsed with ultrasound was rather
too small. This has now been corrected.