Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION Bevacizumab (BEV), a vascular normalizing therapy that prolongs progression free survival (PFS) for patients with recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM). Focused ultrasound combines with microbubbles (MB-FUS), an emergent technology for targeted blood-brain barrier opening (BBBO), is under investigation for its combinatorial effect with current standard of care for GBM treatment. This study aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of BEV + MB-FUS for treating patients with rGBM. METHODS This is a phase IIa, open-label, single-arm clinical trial (NCT04446416). Eligible patients received BEV (10 mg/kg), then MB-FUS with a MB dosage of 0.1 ml/kg and neuronavigation-guided FUS system (NaviFUS-001, NaviFUS, Taiwan). The MB-FUS is planned to be an add-on modality to the bi-weekly BEV therapy for up to 18 sessions (FUSBEV, 34 weeks). RESULTS Six patients underwent total 156 FUS-BEVs (26 times per patients). Three patients (50%) completed the trial protocol, 2 of another 3 patients had disease progression during the treatments, the remaining one patient was in stable disease. The mean progression free survival was 7.5 months. Among the 156 sessions of MB-FUS, there were 3 (1.9%) transient focal scalp pain related to heating. An evaluation of the MB-FUS penetrated regions revealed a significant normalization effect of T2 signal hyperintensity at beam-concentrated areas. CONCLUSIONS The PFS-6 was 67% in this study. RESULTS have demonstrated the safety, feasibility, and a potential to decrease edema by the mechanism of enhance bevacizumab delivery to the treated site. The preliminary results are encouraging. More data are needed to proof the efficacy of BEV-FUS on rGBM patients.

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