Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia

Purpose To investigate the design of an endoluminal deployable ultrasound applicator for delivering volumetric hyperthermia to deep tissue sites as a possible adjunct to radiation and chemotherapy. Method This study considers an ultrasound applicator consisting of two tubular transducers situated at...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Zubair, Matthew S. Adams, Chris J. Diederich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-08-01
Series:International Journal of Hyperthermia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2021.1936216
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spelling doaj-a4906b9eab1d456abafbfe07520f059c2021-08-24T14:40:57ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Hyperthermia0265-67361464-51572021-08-013811188120410.1080/02656736.2021.19362161936216Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermiaMuhammad Zubair0Matthew S. Adams1Chris J. Diederich2Thermal Therapy Research Group, Department of Radiation Oncology, University of California San FranciscoThermal Therapy Research Group, Department of Radiation Oncology, University of California San FranciscoThermal Therapy Research Group, Department of Radiation Oncology, University of California San FranciscoPurpose To investigate the design of an endoluminal deployable ultrasound applicator for delivering volumetric hyperthermia to deep tissue sites as a possible adjunct to radiation and chemotherapy. Method This study considers an ultrasound applicator consisting of two tubular transducers situated at the end of a catheter assembly, encased within a distensible conical shaped balloon-based reflector that redirects acoustic energy distally into the tissue. The applicator assembly can be inserted endoluminally or laparoscopically in a compact form and expanded after delivery to the target site. Comprehensive acoustic and biothermal simulations and parametric studies were employed in generalized 3D and patient-specific pancreatic head and body tumor models to characterize the acoustic performance and evaluate heating capabilities of the applicator by investigating the device at a range of operating frequencies, tissue acoustic and thermal properties, transducer configurations, power modulation, applicator positioning, and by analyzing the resultant 40, 41, and 43 °C isothermal volumes and penetration depth of the heating volume. Intensity distributions and volumetric temperature contours were calculated to define moderate hyperthermia boundaries. Results Parametric studies demonstrated the frequency selection to control volume and depth of therapeutic heating from 62 to 22 cm3 and 4 to 2.6 cm as frequency ranges from 1 MHz to 4.7 MHz, respectively. Width of the heating profile tracks closely with the aperture. Water cooling within the reflector balloon was effective in controlling temperature to 37 °C maximum within the luminal wall. Patient-specific studies indicated that applicators with extended OD in the range of 3.6–6.2 cm with 0.5–1 cm long and 1 cm OD transducers can heat volumes of 1.1–7 cm3, 3–26 cm3, and 3.3–37.4 cm3 of pancreatic body and head tumors above 43, 41, and 40 °C, respectively. Conclusion In silico studies demonstrated the feasibility of combining endoluminal ultrasound with an integrated expandable balloon reflector for delivering volumetric hyperthermia in regions adjacent to body lumens and cavities.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2021.1936216ultrasound hyperthermiatargeted drug deliverythermal therapyendoluminal ultrasound applicatorpancreatic cancer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Zubair
Matthew S. Adams
Chris J. Diederich
spellingShingle Muhammad Zubair
Matthew S. Adams
Chris J. Diederich
Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
International Journal of Hyperthermia
ultrasound hyperthermia
targeted drug delivery
thermal therapy
endoluminal ultrasound applicator
pancreatic cancer
author_facet Muhammad Zubair
Matthew S. Adams
Chris J. Diederich
author_sort Muhammad Zubair
title Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
title_short Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
title_full Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
title_fullStr Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
title_full_unstemmed Deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
title_sort deployable ultrasound applicators for endoluminal delivery of volumetric hyperthermia
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Hyperthermia
issn 0265-6736
1464-5157
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Purpose To investigate the design of an endoluminal deployable ultrasound applicator for delivering volumetric hyperthermia to deep tissue sites as a possible adjunct to radiation and chemotherapy. Method This study considers an ultrasound applicator consisting of two tubular transducers situated at the end of a catheter assembly, encased within a distensible conical shaped balloon-based reflector that redirects acoustic energy distally into the tissue. The applicator assembly can be inserted endoluminally or laparoscopically in a compact form and expanded after delivery to the target site. Comprehensive acoustic and biothermal simulations and parametric studies were employed in generalized 3D and patient-specific pancreatic head and body tumor models to characterize the acoustic performance and evaluate heating capabilities of the applicator by investigating the device at a range of operating frequencies, tissue acoustic and thermal properties, transducer configurations, power modulation, applicator positioning, and by analyzing the resultant 40, 41, and 43 °C isothermal volumes and penetration depth of the heating volume. Intensity distributions and volumetric temperature contours were calculated to define moderate hyperthermia boundaries. Results Parametric studies demonstrated the frequency selection to control volume and depth of therapeutic heating from 62 to 22 cm3 and 4 to 2.6 cm as frequency ranges from 1 MHz to 4.7 MHz, respectively. Width of the heating profile tracks closely with the aperture. Water cooling within the reflector balloon was effective in controlling temperature to 37 °C maximum within the luminal wall. Patient-specific studies indicated that applicators with extended OD in the range of 3.6–6.2 cm with 0.5–1 cm long and 1 cm OD transducers can heat volumes of 1.1–7 cm3, 3–26 cm3, and 3.3–37.4 cm3 of pancreatic body and head tumors above 43, 41, and 40 °C, respectively. Conclusion In silico studies demonstrated the feasibility of combining endoluminal ultrasound with an integrated expandable balloon reflector for delivering volumetric hyperthermia in regions adjacent to body lumens and cavities.
topic ultrasound hyperthermia
targeted drug delivery
thermal therapy
endoluminal ultrasound applicator
pancreatic cancer
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2021.1936216
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