Abstract

This study demonstrated that high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) produced with an intra-operative toroidal-shaped transducer causes fast, selective liver tumor ablations in an animal model. The HIFU device is composed of 256 emitters working at 3 MHz. A 7.5 MHz ultrasound imaging probe centered on the HIFU transducer guided treatment. VX2 tumor segments (25 mg) were implanted into the right lateral liver lobes of 45 New Zealand rabbits. The animals were evenly divided into groups 1 (toroidal HIFU ablation), 2 (surgical resection) and 3 (untreated control). Therapeutic responses were evaluated with gross pathology and histology 11 d post-treatment. Toroidal transducer-produced HIFU ablation (average ablation rate 10.5 cc/min) allowed fast and homogeneous tumor treatment. Sonograms showed all ablations. VX2 tumors were completely coagulated and surrounded by safety margins without surrounding-organ secondary HIFU lesions. HIFU group tumor volumes at autopsy (39 mm3) were significantly lower than control group volumes (2610 mm3, p < 0.0001). HIFU group tumor metastasis (27%) was lower than resected (33%) and control (67%) group metastasis. Ultrasound imaging, gross pathology and histology results supported these outcomes. HIFU procedures had no complications. Rabbit liver tumor ablation using a toroidal HIFU transducer under ultrasound imaging guidance might therefore be an effective intra-operative treatment for localized liver metastases.

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