Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and malignant type of primary brain tumor. Even after surgery and chemoradiotherapy, residual GBM cells can infiltrate the healthy brain parenchyma to form secondary tumors. To mitigate GBM recurrence, we recently developed an injectable hydrogel that can be crosslinked in the resection cavity to attract, collect, and ablate residual GBM cells. We previously optimized a thiol-Michael addition hydrogel for physical, chemical, and biological compatibility with the GBM microenvironment and demonstrated CXCL12-mediated chemotaxis can attract and entrap GBM cells into this hydrogel. In this study, we synthesize hydrogels under conditions mimicking GBM resection cavities and assess feasibility of histotripsy to ablate hydrogel-encapsulated cells. The results showed the hydrogel synthesis was bio-orthogonal, not shear-thinning, and can be scaled up for injection into GBM resection mimics in vitro. Experiments also demonstrated ultrasound imaging can distinguish the synthetic hydrogel from healthy porcine brain tissue. Finally, a 500kHz transducer applied focused ultrasound treatment to the synthetic hydrogels, with results demonstrating precise histotripsy bubble clouds could be sustained in order to uniformly ablate red blood cells encapsulated by the hydrogel for homogeneous, mechanical fractionation of the entrapped cells. Overall, this hydrogel is a promising platform for biomaterials-based GBM treatment.
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