DOI: 10.25259/ijmr_2529_2025 ISSN: 0971-5916

Focused ultrasound–induced blood–brain barrier modulation for drug delivery in recurrent glioblastoma: A systematic review

Muhammad Alifian Remifta Putra, Siti Alyaa Salma Ghozali, Meuthia Faralita Annisa

Background and objectives

Glioblastoma is the most aggressive primary adult central nervous system of malignancy, with a median overall survival of 12–18 months. Recurrence is almost inevitable and carries poor outcomes, with median overall survival of 2–9 months and progression-free survival of 1.5–6 months. Treatment options are limited, as locoregional therapies apply to selected patients, and systemic treatments are restricted by the blood–brain barrier. Focused ultrasound has emerged as a noninvasive method to transiently and reversibly increase blood–brain barrier permeability. This study aims to systematically evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of focused ultrasound-mediated blood–brain barrier modulation to enhance drug delivery in recurrent glioblastoma.

Methods

A systematic search of PubMed, ScienceDirect, Scopus, the Cochrane Library, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Wiley Online Library identified studies published between 2015-2024. The review followed PRISMA guidelines, with risk of bias assessed using ROBINS-I and protocol registration in PROSPERO (CRD420251010548). Disagreements were resolved by consensus.

Results

Twelve clinical trials involving 841 patients met inclusion criteria. Focused ultrasound-mediated platforms included SonoCloud-1, SonoCloud-9, ExAblate Neuro, and NaviFUS, with 1–10 sonication sessions lasting 2.5–22 min. blood–brain barrier opening was achieved in 68–100% of procedures. Median overall survival ranged from 9.95–18 months and median progression-free survival (PFS) from 2.2–3.5 months. Several studies reported improved outcomes vs historical chemotherapy-only controls, including progression-free survival-6 rates of 42–52%. Adverse events were mostly mild and transient, with >85% graded as Grade 1 and no treatment-related mortality.

Interpretation and conclusions

Focused ultrasound-mediated blood–brain barrier modulation is a practical therapeutic adjunct that improves intracerebral drug penetration and might extend survival beyond traditional outcomes; providing a noninvasive approach suitable for patients where systemic dose escalation is limited by toxicity and access.

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