The Hamilton Spectator

Ultrasound jiggles open brain barrier

Temporary breach allows treatments for diseases, such as Alzheimers, to pass through to a targeted area

- LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON — A handful of Alzheimer’s patients signed up for a bold experiment: They let scientists beam sound waves into the brain to temporaril­y jiggle an opening in its protective shield.

The so-called blood-brain barrier prevents germs and other damaging substances from leaching in through the bloodstrea­m — but it can block drugs for Alzheimer’s, brain tumours and other neurologic diseases, too.

Canadian researcher­s on Wednesday reported early hints that technology called focused ultrasound can safely poke holes in that barrier — holes that quickly sealed back up — a step toward one day using the non-invasive device to push brain treatments through.

“It’s been a major goal of neuroscien­ce for decades, this idea of a safe and reversible and precise way of breaching the blood-brain barrier,” said Dr. Nir Lipsman, a neurosurge­on at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre who led the study. “It’s exciting.”

The findings were presented at the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Internatio­nal Conference in Chicago and published in Nature Communicat­ions.

This first-step research, conducted in just six people with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s, checked if patients’ fragile blood vessels could withstand the breach without bleeding or other side-effects — it didn’t test potential therapies.

More safety testing is needed but “it’s definitely promising,” said Dr. Eliezer Masliah of the National Institute on Aging, who wasn’t involved with the study. “What is remarkable is that they could do it in a very focused way, they can target a very specific brain region.”

Alzheimer’s isn’t the only target. A similar safety study is underway in Lou Gehrig’s disease. And researcher­s are testing if the tool helps more chemothera­py reach the right spot in people with a deadly brain tumour called glioblasto­ma, the type of tumour that killed The Tragically Hip’s Gord Downie.

“We don’t want to broadly open the blood-brain barrier everywhere. We want to open the blood-brain barrier where we want the treatment to be delivered,” explained Dr. Graeme Woodworth of the University of Maryland Medical Center, who will lead a soon-to-begin brain tumour study.

Scientists have long tried different strategies to overcome the blood-brain barrier with little success. The brain’s blood vessels are lined with cells that form tight junctions, almost like a zipper. The barrier lets in select small molecules. Often, treatments for brain diseases are too big to easily pass.

The new approach: Scientists inject microscopi­c bubbles into the bloodstrea­m. Through an MRI scanner, they aim at a precise brain area. Then they beam ultrasound waves through a helmet-like device to that spot. The pulses of energy make the microbubbl­es vibrate, loosening those zipper-like junctions in hopes that medication­s could slip inside.

Within minutes, Lipsman’s team saw a medical dye appear on the Alzheimer’s patients’ brain scans — proof the barrier opened. A repeat scan the next day showed it was closed again. Patients repeated the procedure a month later.

Researcher­s reported no serious sideeffect­s, and no worsening of cognitive function. The study was funded by the nonprofit Focused Ultrasound Foundation.

“It’s not painful or anything,” said Rick Karr of Everett, Ontario, the study’s first participan­t.

A retired truck driver and amateur musician, Karr was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2011. Doctors made clear the study wouldn’t treat his memory problems, but “I feel privileged,” Karr said in an interview.

“I could help somebody else down the road.”

A French company, CarThera, is testing a different ultrasound technique for brain tumours, using an implant attached to the skull during surgery.

For the non-invasive ultrasound, device maker InSightec has Food and Drug Administra­tion

permission to begin the Maryland tumour trial and a small U.S. Alzheimer’s study.

This time, scientists will aim deeper into Alzheimer’s-affected brains to a key memory region, said lead researcher Dr. Ali Rezai of West Virginia University’s Rockefelle­r Neuroscien­ce Institute. And they’ll measure if simply opening the barrier

could help the body clear away sticky plaques that are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s, after mouse studies suggested that’s a possibilit­y.

But by far the bigger interest is in using ultrasound to deliver drugs — if the nextstep studies conclude it’s safe to try.

“The blood-brain barrier’s no longer off-limits,” Rezai said.

 ?? KEVIN VAN PAASSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brain scans of Rick Karr, the first Alzheimer's patient treated with focused ultrasound.
KEVIN VAN PAASSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brain scans of Rick Karr, the first Alzheimer's patient treated with focused ultrasound.
 ?? KEVIN VAN PAASSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rick Karr is prepared for ultasound treatment at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.
KEVIN VAN PAASSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rick Karr is prepared for ultasound treatment at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.

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