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Dive into the research topics where Calum Crake is active.

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Featured researches published by Calum Crake.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Nanoparticle‐Loaded Protein–Polymer Nanodroplets for Improved Stability and Conversion Efficiency in Ultrasound Imaging and Drug Delivery

Jeong Yu Lee; Dario Carugo; Calum Crake; Joshua Owen; Marie de Saint Victor; Anjali Seth; Constantin Coussios; Eleanor Stride

A new formulation of volatile nanodroplets stabilized by a protein and polymer coating and loaded with magnetic nanoparticles is developed. The droplets show enhanced stability and phase conversion efficiency upon ultrasound exposure compared with existing formulations. Magnetic targeting, encapsulation, and release of an anticancer drug are demonstrated in vitro with a 40% improvement in cytotoxicity compared with free drug.


Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery | 2014

Properties, characteristics and applications of microbubbles for sonothrombolysis

Marie de Saint Victor; Calum Crake; Constantin C. Coussios; Eleanor Stride

Introduction: Ultrasound enhancement of thrombolysis (sonothrombolysis) is further potentiated by administration of acoustically active microbubbles, which may be developed into powerful adjuvant therapies for thrombolytic treatment of occlusive conditions such as ischaemic stroke. Areas covered: The role of microbubbles in sonothrombolysis is evaluated based on published in vitro and in vivo evidence and a critical review of clinical trials to date. Microbubble, ultrasound and drug parameters compiled from a broad search of the existing literature are tabulated. Mechanisms of microbubble-enhanced sonothrombolysis are discussed, with particular focus on acoustic cavitation and thermal effects. A number of challenges to widespread clinical adoption are identified. Key factors for future optimisation of treatment and microbubble design are proposed. Expert opinion: Microbubble enhancement of thrombolysis is supported by a broad range of in vitro and in vivo evidence that demonstrates improved lysis compared to conventional drug treatment or ultrasound without microbubbles. Clinically, this is shown by accelerated recanalisation of occluded arteries; however, further research is needed to ensure patient safety. Before such techniques can enter widespread clinical practice, an improved understanding of the role of microbubbles in sonothrombolysis is required, in addition to demonstration of significant improvement over existing treatments and the development of reliable real-time monitoring protocols.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2015

Passive acoustic mapping of magnetic microbubbles for cavitation enhancement and localization.

Calum Crake; Marie de Saint Victor; Joshua Owen; Christian Coviello; Jamie Collin; Constantin C. Coussios; Eleanor Stride

Magnetic targeting of microbubbles functionalized with superparamagnetic nanoparticles has been demonstrated previously for diagnostic (B-mode) ultrasound imaging and shown to enhance gene delivery in vitro and in vivo. In the present work, passive acoustic mapping (PAM) was used to investigate the potential of magnetic microbubbles for localizing and enhancing cavitation activity under focused ultrasound. Suspensions of magnetic microbubbles consisting of 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC), air and 10 nm diameter iron oxide nanoparticles were injected into a tissue mimicking phantom at different flow velocities (from 0 to 50 mm s(-1)) with or without an applied magnetic field. Microbubbles were excited using a 500 kHz single element focused transducer at peak negative focal pressures of 0.1-1.0 MPa, while a 64 channel imaging array passively recorded their acoustic emissions. Magnetic localization of microbubble-induced cavitation activity was successfully achieved and could be resolved using PAM as a shift in the spatial distribution and increases in the intensity and sustainability of cavitation activity under the influence of a magnetic field. Under flow conditions at shear rates of up to 100 s(-1) targeting efficacy was maintained. Application of a magnetic field was shown to consistently increase the energy of cavitation emissions by a factor of 2-5 times over the duration of exposures compared to the case without targeting, which was approximately equivalent to doubling the injected microbubble dose. These results suggest that magnetic targeting could be used to localize and increase the concentration of microbubbles and hence cavitation activity for a given systemic dose of microbubbles or ultrasound intensity.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2017

Ultrasound‐Enhanced siRNA Delivery Using Magnetic Nanoparticle‐Loaded Chitosan‐Deoxycholic Acid Nanodroplets

Jeong Yu Lee; Calum Crake; Boon M. Teo; Dario Carugo; Marie de Saint Victor; Anjali Seth; Eleanor Stride

Small interfering RNA (siRNA) has significant therapeutic potential but its clinical translation has been severely inhibited by a lack of effective delivery strategies. Previous work has demonstrated that perfluorocarbon nanodroplets loaded with magnetic nanoparticles can facilitate the intracellular delivery of a conventional chemotherapeutic drug. The aim of this study is to determine whether a similar agent can provide a means of delivering siRNA, enabling efficient transfection without degradation of the molecule. Chitosan-deoxycholic acid nanoparticles containing perfluoropentane and iron oxide (d 0 = 7.5 ± 0.35 nm) with a mean hydrodynamic diameter of 257.6 ± 10.9 nm are produced. siRNA (AllStars Hs cell death siRNA) is electrostatically bound to the particle surface and delivery to lung cancer cells and breast cancer cells is investigated with and without ultrasound exposure (500 kHz, 1 MPa peak-to-peak focal pressure, 40 cycles per burst, 1 kHz pulse repetition frequency, 10 s duration). The results show that siRNA functionality is not impaired by the treatment protocol and that the nanodroplets are able to successfully promote siRNA uptake, leading to significant apoptosis (52.4%) 72 h after ultrasound treatment.


IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging | 2017

Passive Acoustic Mapping with the Angular Spectrum Method

Costas D. Arvanitis; Calum Crake; Nathan McDannold; Gregory T. Clement

In the present proof of principle study, we evaluated the homogenous angular spectrum method for passive acoustic mapping (AS-PAM) of microbubble oscillations using simulated and experimental data. In the simulated data we assessed the ability of AS-PAM to form 3D maps of a single and multiple point sources. Then, in the two dimensional limit, we compared the 2D maps from AS-PAM with alternative frequency and time domain passive acoustic mapping (FD- and TD-PAM) approaches. Finally, we assessed the ability of AS-PAM to visualize microbubble activity in vivo with data obtained during 8 different experiments of FUS-induced blood-brain barrier disruption in 3 nonhuman primates, using a clinical MR-guided FUS system. Our in silico results demonstrate AS-PAM can be used to perform 3D passive acoustic mapping. 2D AS-PAM as compared to FD- PAM and TD-PAM is 10 and 200 times faster respectively and has similar sensitivity, resolution, and localization accuracy, even when the noise was 10-fold higher than the signal. In-vivo, the AS-PAM reconstructions of emissions at frequency bands pertinent to the different types of microbubble oscillations were also found to be more sensitive than TD-PAM. AS-PAM of harmonic-only components predicted safe blood-brain barrier disruption, whereas AS-PAM of broadband emissions correctly identified MR-evident tissue damage. The disparity (3.2 mm) in the location of the cavitation activity between the three methods was within their resolution limits. These data clearly demonstrate that AS-PAM is a sensitive and fast approach for PAM, thus providing a clinically relevant method to guide therapeutic ultrasound procedures.


Molecular Therapy | 2016

Polymeric Cups for Cavitation-mediated Delivery of Oncolytic Vaccinia Virus

Rachel Myers; Christian Coviello; Philippe Erbs; Johann Foloppe; Cliff Rowe; James J. Kwan; Calum Crake; Seán Finn; Edward Jackson; Jean-Marc Balloul; Colin Story; Constantin Coussios; Robert Carlisle

Oncolytic viruses (OV) could become the most powerful and selective cancer therapies. However, the limited transport of OV into and throughout tumors following intravenous injection means their clinical administration is often restricted to direct intratumoral dosing. Application of physical stimuli, such as focused ultrasound, offers a means of achieving enhanced mass transport. In particular, shockwaves and microstreaming resulting from the instigation of an ultrasound-induced event known as inertial cavitation can propel OV hundreds of microns. We have recently developed a polymeric cup formulation which, when delivered intravenously, provides the nuclei for instigation of sustained inertial cavitation events within tumors. Here we report that exposure of tumors to focused ultrasound after intravenous coinjection of cups and oncolytic vaccinia virus , leads to substantial and significant increases in activity. When cavitation was instigated within SKOV-3 or HepG2 xenografts, reporter gene expression from vaccinia virus was enhanced 1,000-fold (P < 0.0001) or 10,000-fold (P < 0.001), respectively. Similar increases in the number of vaccinia virus genomes recovered from tumors were also observed. In survival studies, the application of cup mediated cavitation to a vaccinia virus expressing a prodrug converting enzyme provided significant (P < 0.05) retardation of tumor growth. This technology could improve the clinical utility of all biological therapeutics including OV.


Drug Delivery and Translational Research | 2018

A versatile method for the preparation of particle-loaded microbubbles for multimodality imaging and targeted drug delivery

Joshua Owen; Calum Crake; Jeong Yu Lee; Dario Carugo; Estelle Beguin; Alexandre A. Khrapitchev; Richard J. Browning; Nicola R. Sibson; Eleanor Stride

Microbubbles are currently in clinical use as ultrasound contrast agents and under active investigation as mediators of ultrasound therapy. To improve the theranostic potential of microbubbles, nanoparticles can be attached to the bubble shell for imaging, targeting and/or enhancement of acoustic response. Existing methods for fabricating particle-loaded bubbles, however, require the use of polymers, oil layers or chemical reactions for particle incorporation; embed/attach the particles that can reduce echogenicity; impair biocompatibility; and/or involve multiple processing steps. Here, we describe a simple method to embed nanoparticles in a phospholipid-coated microbubble formulation that overcomes these limitations. Magnetic nanoparticles are used to demonstrate the method with a range of different microbubble formulations. The size distribution and yield of microbubbles are shown to be unaffected by the addition of the particles. We further show that the microbubbles can be retained against flow using a permanent magnet, can be visualised by both ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and can be used to transfect SH-SY5Y cells with fluorescent small interfering RNA under the application of a magnetic field and ultrasound field.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

Passive acoustic mapping of magnetic microbubbles in an in vitro flow model

Calum Crake; Marie de Saint Victor; Christian Coviello; Joshua Owen; Constantin C. Coussios; Eleanor Stride

Magnetic microbubbles can be successfully retained near a vascular target and simultaneously imaged using conventional B-mode ultrasound. When further modified to carry a drug, they could enable significant enhancements in targeted drug delivery for applications such as sonothrombolysis, where stable cavitation has been shown to play a key role. However, the effect of the increased proximity of the microbubbles under the effect of the magnetic field on their acoustic response remains unknown. Passive Acoustic Mapping is a method that enables real-time spatiotemporal monitoring of cavitation dynamics in an arbitrary plane or volume within the field of view of the ultrasound probe, and classification of the type of cavitation activity on the basis of the spatial distribution of frequency-domain emissions. In the present work, PAM is used to investigate the effect of bubble proximity and flow rate on the type, sustainability, intensity and spatial distribution of cavitation activity observed for both magneti...


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2018

Simultaneous Passive Acoustic Mapping and Magnetic Resonance Thermometry for Monitoring of Cavitation-Enhanced Tumor Ablation in Rabbits Using Focused Ultrasound and Phase-Shift Nanoemulsions

Calum Crake; Iason T. Papademetriou; Yongzhi Zhang; Natalia Vykhodtseva; Nathan McDannold; Tyrone M. Porter

Thermal ablation of solid tumors via focused ultrasound (FUS) is a non-invasive image-guided alternative to conventional surgical resection. However, the usefulness of the technique is limited in vascularized organs because of convection of heat, resulting in long sonication times and unpredictable thermal lesion formation. Acoustic cavitation has been found to enhance heating but requires use of exogenous nuclei and sufficient acoustic monitoring. In this study, we employed phase-shift nanoemulsions (PSNEs) to promote cavitation and incorporated passive acoustic mapping (PAM) alongside conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) thermometry within the bore of a clinical MRI scanner. Simultaneous PAM and MRI thermometry were performed in an in vivo rabbit tumor model, with and without PSNE to promote cavitation. Vaporization and cavitation of the nanoemulsion could be detected using PAM, which led to accelerated heating, monitored with MRI thermometry. The maximum heating assessed from MRI was well correlated with the integrated acoustic emissions, illustrating cavitation-enhanced heating. Examination of tissue revealed thermal lesions that were larger in the presence of PSNE, in agreement with the thermometry data. Using fixed exposure conditions over 94 sonications in multiple animals revealed an increase in the mean amplitude of acoustic emissions and resulting temperature rise, but with significant variability between sonications, further illustrating the need for real-time monitoring. The results indicate the utility of combined PAM and MRI for monitoring of tumor ablation and provide further evidence for the ability of PSNEs to promote cavitation-enhanced lesioning.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2018

A dual-mode hemispherical sparse array for 3D passive acoustic mapping and skull localization within a clinical MRI guided focused ultrasound device

Calum Crake; Spencer Brinker; Christian Coviello; Margaret S. Livingstone; Nathan McDannold

Previous work has demonstrated that passive acoustic imaging may be used alongside MRI for monitoring of focused ultrasound therapy. However, past implementations have generally made use of either linear arrays originally designed for diagnostic imaging or custom narrowband arrays specific to in-house therapeutic transducer designs, neither of which is fully compatible with clinical MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) devices. Here we have designed an array which is suitable for use within an FDA-approved MR-guided transcranial focused ultrasound device, within the bore of a 3 Tesla clinical MRI scanner. The array is constructed from 5  ×  0.4 mm piezoceramic disc elements arranged in pseudorandom fashion on a low-profile laser-cut acrylic frame designed to fit between the therapeutic elements of a 230 kHz InSightec ExAblate 4000 transducer. By exploiting thickness and radial resonance modes of the piezo discs the array is capable of both B-mode imaging at 5 MHz for skull localization, as well as passive reception at the second harmonic of the therapy array for detection of cavitation and 3D passive acoustic imaging. In active mode, the array was able to perform B-mode imaging of a human skull, showing the outer skull surface with good qualitative agreement with MR imaging. Extension to 3D showed the array was able to locate the skull within  ±2 mm/2° of reference points derived from MRI, which could potentially allow registration of a patient to the therapy system without the expense of real-time MRI. In passive mode, the array was able to resolve a point source in 3D within a  ±10 mm region about each axis from the focus, detect cavitation (SNR ~ 12 dB) at burst lengths from 10 cycles to continuous wave, and produce 3D acoustic maps in a flow phantom. Finally, the array was used to detect and map cavitation associated with microbubble activity in the brain in nonhuman primates.

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Nathan McDannold

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Dario Carugo

University of Southampton

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