Simple Summary Acoustic holograms were investigated as a method of delivering simultaneously controlled ultrasound hyperthermia to multiple tumor spheroids. Findings show that holographic lenses designed to deliver a uniform thermal… Click to show full abstract
Simple Summary Acoustic holograms were investigated as a method of delivering simultaneously controlled ultrasound hyperthermia to multiple tumor spheroids. Findings show that holographic lenses designed to deliver a uniform thermal dose rather than a uniform acoustic field can tune the natural focus of a transducer, allowing the exposure to ultrasound-mediated hyperthermia of several tumor spheroids simultaneously, and improving experimental throughput for future studies. Preliminary in-vitro findings suggest that hyperthermia delivered by ultrasound and polymerase chain reaction heating have different outcomes, with ultrasound being more lethal for the same thermal dose. Abstract Hyperthermia is currently used to treat cancer due to its ability to radio- and chemo-sensitize and to stimulate the immune response. While ultrasound is non-ionizing and can induce hyperthermia deep within the body non-invasively, achieving uniform and volumetric hyperthermia is challenging. This work presents a novel focused ultrasound hyperthermia system based on 3D-printed acoustic holograms combined with a high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) transducer to produce a uniform iso-thermal dose in multiple targets. The system is designed with the aim of treating several 3D cell aggregates contained in an International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) tissue-mimicking phantom with multiple wells, each holding a single tumor spheroid, with real-time temperature and thermal dose monitoring. System performance was validated using acoustic and thermal methods, ultimately yielding thermal doses in three wells that differed by less than 4%. The system was tested in vitro for delivery of thermal doses of 0–120 cumulative equivalent minutes at 43 °C (CEM43) to spheroids of U87-MG glioma cells. The effects of ultrasound-induced heating on the growth of these spheroids were compared with heating using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) thermocycler. Results showed that exposing U87-MG spheroids to an ultrasound-induced thermal dose of 120 CEM43 shrank them by 15% and decreased their growth and metabolic activity more than seen in those exposed to a thermocycler-induced heating. This low-cost approach of modifying a HIFU transducer to deliver ultrasound hyperthermia opens new avenues for accurately controlling thermal dose delivery to complex therapeutic targets using tailored acoustic holograms. Spheroid data show that thermal and non-thermal mechanisms are implicated in the response of cancer cells to non-ablative ultrasound heating.
               
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