Literature DB >> 12960202

Maternal-fetal in vivo imaging: a combined PET and MRI study.

Helene Benveniste1, Joanna S Fowler, William D Rooney, Daryn H Moller, W Walter Backus, Donald A Warner, Pauline Carter, Payton King, Bruce Scharf, David A Alexoff, Yeming Ma, Paul Vaska, David Schlyer, Nora D Volkow.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: An understanding of how drugs are transferred between mother and fetus during the gestational period is an important medical issue of relevance to both therapeutic drugs and drugs of abuse. Though there are several in vitro and in vivo methods to examine this issue, all have limitations. Furthermore, ethical and safety considerations generally preclude such studies in pregnant humans. PET and appropriately labeled compounds have the ability to provide information on both maternal-fetal drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. We present here a nonhuman primate animal model and the methodology for combining PET and MRI to identify fetal organs and to measure maternal and fetal isotope distribution using (18)F-FDG and a whole-body imaging protocol to demonstrate proof-of-principle.
METHODS: One nonpregnant nonhuman primate was used for determination of the anesthesia protocol and MRI methods and 3 pregnant nonhuman primates (Macaques radiata) weighing 4.5-7 kg were used for the imaging study and anesthetized with propofol (160-300 micro g/kg/min). Anatomic T2-weighted MR images were acquired on a 4-T MR instrument. Subsequently, whole-body PET images were acquired 35 min after injection of (18)F-FDG, and standardized uptake values (SUVs) were calculated. Image processing and coregistration were performed using commercial software.
RESULTS: All animals underwent uneventful general anesthesia for a period of up to 7 h. Coregistration of PET and MR images allowed identification of fetal organs and demonstrated that (18)F-FDG readily crosses the placenta and that (18)F accumulates in both maternal and fetal brain, heart, and bladder. Brain SUVs averaged 1.95 +/- 0.08 (mean +/- SD) and 1.58 +/- 0.11 for mothers and fetuses, respectively. Monkeys delivered healthy babies after a normal gestational term of 170 d following the PET/MRI study.
CONCLUSION: The pregnant macaque in combination with PET and MRI technology allows the measurement of radioisotope distribution in maternal and fetal organs. This demonstrates the potential for noninvasively measuring the transfer of drugs across the placenta and for measuring the fetal drug distribution. It also opens up the possibility for studying binding and elimination as well as the effects of a drug on specific cellular elements and physiologic processes during the gestational period in a primate model.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12960202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


  14 in total

1.  Neuroimaging of prenatal drug exposure.

Authors:  Diana L Dow-Edwards; Helene Benveniste; Marylou Behnke; Emmalee S Bandstra; Lynn T Singer; Yasmin L Hurd; L R Stanford
Journal:  Neurotoxicol Teratol       Date:  2006 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.763

2.  Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide-enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Spontaneous Hepatic Neoplasia in a Cynomolgus Macaque (Macaca fascicularis).

Authors:  Yasuyo Ito Fujishiro; Hiroshi Koie; Shunya Nakayama; Hiroaki Shibata; Sachi Okabayashi; Yuko Katakai; Kiichi Kanayama; Yasuhiro Yasutomi; Naohide Ageyama
Journal:  Comp Med       Date:  2018-05-29       Impact factor: 0.982

3.  Radiation dose to the fetus from [(18)F]-FDG administration during the second trimester of pregnancy.

Authors:  Paolo Zanotti-Fregonara; Thomas M Koroscil; Joseph Mantil; Martin Satter
Journal:  Health Phys       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 1.316

4.  Development of computational pregnant female and fetus models and assessment of radiation dose from positron-emitting tracers.

Authors:  Tianwu Xie; Habib Zaidi
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2016-06-28       Impact factor: 9.236

5.  Development and Evaluation of mini-EXPLORER: A Long Axial Field-of-View PET Scanner for Nonhuman Primate Imaging.

Authors:  Eric Berg; Xuezhu Zhang; Julien Bec; Martin S Judenhofer; Brijesh Patel; Qiyu Peng; Maciej Kapusta; Matthias Schmand; Michael E Casey; Alice F Tarantal; Jinyi Qi; Ramsey D Badawi; Simon R Cherry
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2018-02-01       Impact factor: 10.057

6.  Effect of insulin and dexamethasone on fetal assimilation of maternal glucose.

Authors:  Andrew W Norris; Chunlin Wang; Jianrong Yao; Susan A Walsh; Alexander B Sawatzke; Shanming Hu; John J Sunderland; Jeffrey L Segar; Laura L B Ponto
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2010-11-17       Impact factor: 4.736

7.  Fetal dose estimates for (18)F-fluoro-L-thymidine using a pregnant monkey model.

Authors:  Rachel M Bartlett; Robert J Nickles; Todd E Barnhart; Bradley T Christian; James E Holden; Onofre T DeJesus
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2010-01-15       Impact factor: 10.057

8.  Cocaine is pharmacologically active in the nonhuman primate fetal brain.

Authors:  Helene Benveniste; Joanna S Fowler; William D Rooney; Bruce A Scharf; W Walter Backus; Igor Izrailtyan; Gitte M Knudsen; Steen G Hasselbalch; Nora D Volkow
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-01-04       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Preliminary evaluation of dynamic glucose enhanced MRI of the human placenta during glucose tolerance test.

Authors:  Jie Luo; Esra Abaci Turk; Borjan Gagoski; Natalie Copeland; Iris Y Zhou; Vanessa Young; Carolina Bibbo; Julian N Robinson; Chloe Zera; William H Barth; Drucilla J Roberts; Phillip Zhe Sun; P Ellen Grant
Journal:  Quant Imaging Med Surg       Date:  2019-10

Review 10.  Radiation Absorbed Dose to the Embryo and Fetus from Radiopharmaceuticals.

Authors:  Paolo Zanotti-Fregonara
Journal:  Semin Nucl Med       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 4.446

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