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InSightec’s Ultrasound Tech Wins FDA Nod as Essential Tremor Treatment

Imaging Visualization & Navigation August 9, 2016

InSightec is helping some patients avoid brain surgery by using focused ultrasound to treat essential tremor in a noninvasive manner.

essential tremor

 

InSightec’s Exablate Neuro includes a helmet that circulates cooling water to keep a patient’s scalp from overheating during the focused ultrasound treatment.

For patients suffering from essential tremor, brain surgery can be a daunting resort for treating the movement disorder. Medical technology company InSightec has developed an alternative that doesn’t require a surgeon to even break skin. The device produces beams of ultrasound that converge on a specific point in the brain, heating up and burning away the problem brain tissue. FDA granted Exablate Neuro premarket approval in July, giving surgeons a completely new approach for treating tremors.

“We can now start thinking about treating the body not by being minimally invasive, but by being completely noninvasive,” CEO Maurice Ferré said.

InSightec has focused on ultrasound since it was founded in 1999. The company, which is based in Israel and has U.S. offices in Dallas and Miami, started with applications in women’s health, using high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) as a noninvasive way to ablate uterine fibroids. The company also received approvals for its technology in some forms of cancer. But Ferré said the most intriguing target for InSightec’s technology was the brain.

According to the National Institutes of Health, as many as 10 million people in the United States suffer from essential tremor, involuntary movements characterized by shaking in the hands. When patients don’t respond to drug therapy, surgery is the next option for addressing the tremors. Deep brain stimulation uses a surgically implanted neurostimulator to deliver electrical signals to targeted areas of the brain that block tremor-causing signals. A riskier approach is thalamotomy, a surgical procedure that destroys part of the thalamus in order to stem the tremors.

essential tremor

The focused ultrasound procedure is performed with an MRI scanner, which allows the surgeon to see what is happening in the brain in real time.

Ultrasound offered the potential for a less-invasive thalamotomy, but it still faced challenges. Though ultrasound is more widely known for applications in imaging, it is a form of energy, Ferré said. In order to reach the brain, ultrasound must first travel through bone, which absorbs and diffuses energy. Upon reaching the brain, ultrasound beams need to align in a way that targets only the intended tissue. That’s where software comes into play. The technology that aligns the ultrasound beams is similar to the technology that Israel uses for its iron dome defense system, which uses software to predict the trajectory of rockets fired into the country, Ferré said. InSightec’s software focuses ultrasound precisely on the targeted tissue. Surgeons monitor the procedure in real time using an MRI scanner. During the three to four hour procedure, the fully-conscious patient wears a cooling cap.

InSightec studied its technology for three years in a randomized and sham-controlled clinical trial involving 76 patients who did not respond to drug therapy. According to the trial results, patients treated with focused ultrasound showed a nearly 50 percent improvement in their tremors and motor function compared to their baseline scores. After one year, the treatment group retained a 40 percent improvement over baseline scores. The control group showed no improvement. FDA’s approval order requires InSightec to conduct follow up studies evaluating patients from the clinical trial each year through five years following treatment in order to gather long-term information about the treatment’s safety and efficacy.

Focused ultrasound’s main advantage is that the treatment is noninvasive, said Vibhor Krishna, MD, a neurosurgeon at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, one of the clinical trial sites. Patients may feel headaches, dizziness, and numbness in parts of the body with each 10-15 second pulse of ultrasound. Krishna said that surgeons do “mini-treatments” first, increasing the temperature slightly and testing to see if the ultrasound is targeting the right part of the brain.

“Once you are satisfied that the location of the brain is safe, you can go ahead and do the final ablation,” Krishna said.

Read Full Article – Source: InSightec’s Ultrasound Tech Wins FDA Nod as Essential Tremor Treatment | MDDI Medical Device and Diagnostic Industry News Products and Suppliers

Author – Frank Vinluan

Images courtesy of INSIGHTEC

AUTHOR - Authorship Credit Noted Above
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