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System for delivering microwave ablation to subcutaneous tumors in small-animals under high-field MRI thermometry guidance

  • Jan Sebek
  • , Tej B. Shrestha
  • , Matthew T. Basel
  • , Faraz Chamani
  • , Nooshin Zeinali
  • , Ivina Mali
  • , Macy Payne
  • , Sarah A. Timmerman
  • , Pegah Faridi
  • , Marla Pyle
  • , Martin O’Halloran
  • , M. Conall Dennedy
  • , Stefan H. Bossmann
  • , Punit Prakash
  • Kansas State University
  • Czech Technical University in Prague
  • Kansas State University
  • University of Kansas Medical Center

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Purpose: Bio-effects following thermal treatments are a function of the achieved temperature profile in tissue, which can be estimated across tumor volumes with real-time MRI thermometry (MRIT). Here, we report on expansion of a previously developed small-animal microwave hyperthermia system integrated with MRIT for delivering thermal ablation to subcutaneously implanted tumors in mice. Methods: Computational models were employed to assess suitability of the 2.45 GHz microwave applicators for delivering ablation to subcutaneous tumor targets in mice. Phantoms and ex-vivo tissues were heated to temperatures in the range 47–67 °C with custom-made microwave applicators for validating MRIT with the proton resonance frequency shift method against fiberoptic thermometry. HAC15 tumors implanted in nude mice (n = 6) were ablated in vivo and monitored with MRIT in multiple planes. One day post ablation, animals were euthanized, and excised tumors were processed for viability assessment. Results: Average absolute error between temperatures from fiberoptic sensors and MRIT was 0.6 °C across all ex-vivo ablations. During in-vivo experiments, tumors with volumes ranging between 5.4–35.9 mm3 (mean 14.2 mm3) were ablated (duration: 103–150 s) to achieve 55 °C at the tumor boundary. Thermal doses ≥240 CEM43 were achieved across 90.7–98.0% of tumor volumes for four cases. Ablations were incomplete for remaining cases, attributed to motion-affected thermometry. Thermal dose-based ablative tumor coverage agreed with viability assessment of excised tumors. Conclusions: We have developed a system for delivering microwave ablation to subcutaneous tumors in small animals under MRIT guidance and demonstrated its performance in-vivo.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)584-594
Number of pages11
JournalInternational Journal of Hyperthermia
Volume39
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Keywords

  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • microwave ablation
  • MRI thermometry
  • Small-animal ablation system

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