Study identifies key metric for safe blood brain barrier opening in glioblastoma patients
The blood-brain barrier-a feature of blood vessels that protects the brain from harmful substances-is so good at its job that it poses a serious obstacle to treating brain cancer. To deliver therapeutic treatments across the blood-brain barrier (BBB), researchers at Mass General Brigham have been working for decades on a technique known as focused ultrasound, which uses low-power ultrasound technology combined with microbubbles. In a new study, researchers at Mass General Brigham collaborated with colleagues at University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) to analyze results from ultrasound treatments delivered to 23 patients. Results published in Device identify a key metric-known as acoustic emission dose-which can predict how well the BBB opened, identifying a sweet spot that the team used for treating patients.
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