High-intensity focused ultrasound, or HIFU, is an innovative, noninvasive treatment for prostate cancer as well as for pain caused by cancer that has spread to bones. The ultrasound transducer used for HIFU is similar to those used for diagnostic imaging but it emits sound waves of much higher intensity. Much as a magnifying glass can focus sunbeams to burn a hole in a piece of paper, the HIFU transducer focuses sound waves onto a tiny area of abnormal tissue, generating enough heat to destroy the cells. This treatment is also known as MRgFUS (MRI-guided focused ultrasound) and FUS (focused ultrasound surgery).
High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU)
The technique’s precision makes it possible to destroy cancerous cells without damaging healthy tissue and allows for safely repeating the process as many times as needed. The ultrasound waves can pass through layers of tissue without causing harm until they reach their target.
MRI imaging is used both to plan the treatment and to monitor the target’s heat level during the procedure. Depending on the condition being treated, patients may be under general anesthesia (completely asleep) or awake but sedated.
Advantages of HIFU
HIFU has a number of advantages over other treatment options, including:
- It doesn't require traditional surgery
- Patients aren’t exposed to radiation.
- It precisely targets diseased tissue, leaving healthy tissue unharmed.
- It has fewer side effects compared with surgery or radiation treatment.
- It is an outpatient procedure, with a short recovery time. Most patients return to normal activities within 24 hours.
HIFU at UCSF
UCSF doctors are offering HIFU as a treatment for:
- Prostate cancer when the tumor is confined to one region of the prostate
- Pain from cancer that's spread to bones
- Essential tremor
Our providers are also investigating HIFU as an experimental treatment for:
- Reducing the size and pain of desmoid tumors
- Treating pain from osteoid osteomas