Literature DB >> 19994538

A robotic system for 18F-FMISO PET-guided intratumoral pO2 measurements.

Jenghwa Chang1, Bixiu Wen, Peter Kazanzides, Pat Zanzonico, Ronald D Finn, Gabor Fichtinger, C Clifton Ling.   

Abstract

An image-guided robotic system was used to measure the oxygen tension (pO2) in rodent tumor xenografts using interstitial probes guided by tumor hypoxia PET images. Rats with approximately 1 cm diameter tumors were anesthetized and immobilized in a custom-fabricated whole-body mold. Imaging was performed using a dedicated small-animal PET scanner (R4 or Focus 120 microPET) approximately 2 h after the injection of the hypoxia tracer 18F-fluoromisonidazole (18F-FMISO). The coordinate systems of the robot and PET were registered based on fiducial markers in the rodent bed visible on the PET images. Guided by the 3D microPET image set, measurements were performed at various locations in the tumor and compared to the corresponding 18F-FMISO image intensity at the respective measurement points. Experiments were performed on four tumor-bearing rats with 4 (86), 3 (80), 7 (162), and 8 (235) measurement tracks (points) for each experiment. The 18F-FMISO image intensities were inversely correlated with the measured pO2, with a Pearson coefficient ranging from -0.14 to -0.97 for the 22 measurement tracks. The cumulative scatterplots of pO2 versus image intensity yielded a hyperbolic relationship, with correlation coefficients of 0.52, 0.48, 0.64, and 0.73, respectively, for the four tumors. In conclusion, PET image-guided pO2 measurement is feasible with this robot system and, more generally, this system will permit point-by-point comparison of physiological probe measurements and image voxel values as a means of validating molecularly targeted radiotracers. Although the overall data fitting suggested that 18F-FMISO may be an effective hypoxia marker, the use of static 18F-FMISO PET postinjection scans to guide radiotherapy might be problematic due to the observed high variation in some individual data pairs from the fitted curve, indicating potential temporal fluctuation of oxygen tension in individual voxels or possible suboptimal imaging time postadministration of hypoxia-related trapping of 18F-FMISO.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19994538      PMCID: PMC2776816          DOI: 10.1118/1.3239491

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  52 in total

Review 1.  Hypoxia: importance in tumor biology, noninvasive measurement by imaging, and value of its measurement in the management of cancer therapy.

Authors:  James L Tatum; Gary J Kelloff; Robert J Gillies; Jeffrey M Arbeit; J Martin Brown; K S Clifford Chao; J Donald Chapman; William C Eckelman; Anthony W Fyles; Amato J Giaccia; Richard P Hill; Cameron J Koch; Murali Cherukuri Krishna; Kenneth A Krohn; Jason S Lewis; Ralph P Mason; Giovanni Melillo; Anwar R Padhani; Garth Powis; Joseph G Rajendran; Richard Reba; Simon P Robinson; Gregg L Semenza; Harold M Swartz; Peter Vaupel; David Yang; Barbara Croft; John Hoffman; Guoying Liu; Helen Stone; Daniel Sullivan
Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 2.694

2.  Imaging of hypoxia in human tumors with [F-18]fluoromisonidazole.

Authors:  W J Koh; J S Rasey; M L Evans; J R Grierson; T K Lewellen; M M Graham; K A Krohn; T W Griffin
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 7.038

3.  Pretreatment oxygenation predicts radiation response in advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.

Authors:  M Nordsmark; M Overgaard; J Overgaard
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 6.280

4.  Evidence for acutely hypoxic cells in mouse tumours, and a possible mechanism of reoxygenation.

Authors:  J M Brown
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  1979-08       Impact factor: 3.039

5.  Measurement of oxygen tension in tumours by time-resolved fluorescence.

Authors:  W K Young; B Vojnovic; P Wardman
Journal:  Br J Cancer Suppl       Date:  1996-07

6.  Animal-specific positioning molds for registration of repeat imaging studies: comparative microPET imaging of F18-labeled fluoro-deoxyglucose and fluoro-misonidazole in rodent tumors.

Authors:  Pat Zanzonico; Jose Campa; Dolores Polycarpe-Holman; Gregor Forster; Ronald Finn; Steven Larson; John Humm; Clifton Ling
Journal:  Nucl Med Biol       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 2.408

Review 7.  Imaging hypoxia and angiogenesis in tumors.

Authors:  Joseph G Rajendran; Kenneth A Krohn
Journal:  Radiol Clin North Am       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 2.303

8.  Measurements of hypoxia using pimonidazole and polarographic oxygen-sensitive electrodes in human cervix carcinomas.

Authors:  Marianne Nordsmark; Juliette Loncaster; Christina Aquino-Parsons; Shu Chuan Chou; Morten Ladekarl; Hanne Havsteen; Jacob C Lindegaard; Susan E Davidson; Mahesh Varia; Catharine West; Robin Hunter; Jens Overgaard; James A Raleigh
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 6.280

9.  Noninvasive multimodality imaging of the tumor microenvironment: registered dynamic magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography studies of a preclinical tumor model of tumor hypoxia.

Authors:  HyungJoon Cho; Ellen Ackerstaff; Sean Carlin; Mihaela E Lupu; Ya Wang; Asif Rizwan; Joseph O'Donoghue; C Clifton Ling; John L Humm; Pat B Zanzonico; Jason A Koutcher
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 5.715

10.  A modeling approach for quantifying tumor hypoxia with [F-18]fluoromisonidazole PET time-activity data.

Authors:  J J Casciari; M M Graham; J S Rasey
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 4.071

View more
  13 in total

1.  Quantification of Tumor Hypoxic Fractions Using Positron Emission Tomography with [18F]Fluoromisonidazole ([18F]FMISO) Kinetic Analysis and Invasive Oxygen Measurements.

Authors:  Olivia J Kelada; Sara Rockwell; Ming-Qiang Zheng; Yiyun Huang; Yanfeng Liu; Carmen J Booth; Roy H Decker; Uwe Oelfke; Richard E Carson; David J Carlson
Journal:  Mol Imaging Biol       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 3.488

Review 2.  Molecular imaging of tumor hypoxia with positron emission tomography.

Authors:  Olivia J Kelada; David J Carlson
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2014-03-27       Impact factor: 2.841

Review 3.  Optical probes and techniques for O2 measurement in live cells and tissue.

Authors:  Ruslan I Dmitriev; Dmitri B Papkovsky
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2012-01-17       Impact factor: 9.261

4.  Imaging of brain oxygenation with magnetic resonance imaging: A validation with positron emission tomography in the healthy and tumoural brain.

Authors:  Samuel Valable; Aurélien Corroyer-Dulmont; Ararat Chakhoyan; Lucile Durand; Jérôme Toutain; Didier Divoux; Louisa Barré; Eric T MacKenzie; Edwige Petit; Myriam Bernaudin; Omar Touzani; Emmanuel L Barbier
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2016-01-01       Impact factor: 6.200

5.  Image-guided PO2 probe measurements correlated with parametric images derived from 18F-fluoromisonidazole small-animal PET data in rats.

Authors:  Rachel M Bartlett; Bradley J Beattie; Manoj Naryanan; Jens-Christoph Georgi; Qing Chen; Sean D Carlin; Gordon Roble; Pat B Zanzonico; Mithat Gonen; Joseph O'Donoghue; Alexander Fischer; John L Humm
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2012-08-29       Impact factor: 10.057

Review 6.  Molecular imaging of hypoxia in non-small-cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Connie Yip; Philip J Blower; Vicky Goh; David B Landau; Gary J R Cook
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2015-02-21       Impact factor: 9.236

Review 7.  Positron emission tomography to assess hypoxia and perfusion in lung cancer.

Authors:  Eline E Verwer; Ronald Boellaard; Astrid Am van der Veldt
Journal:  World J Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-12-10

Review 8.  The clinical importance of assessing tumor hypoxia: relationship of tumor hypoxia to prognosis and therapeutic opportunities.

Authors:  Joseph C Walsh; Artem Lebedev; Edward Aten; Kathleen Madsen; Liane Marciano; Hartmuth C Kolb
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2014-05-09       Impact factor: 8.401

9.  Luminal and basal-like breast cancer cells show increased migration induced by hypoxia, mediated by an autocrine mechanism.

Authors:  Melanie J Voss; Mischa F Möller; Desmond G Powe; Bernd Niggemann; Kurt S Zänker; Frank Entschladen
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2011-05-02       Impact factor: 4.430

10.  Comparing CT perfusion with oxygen partial pressure in a rabbit VX2 soft-tissue tumor model.

Authors:  Chang-Jin Sun; Chao Li; Hai-Bo Lv; Cong Zhao; Jin-Ming Yu; Guang-Hui Wang; Yun-Xiu Luo; Yan Li; Mingyong Xiao; Jun Yin; Jin-Yi Lang
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2013-09-26       Impact factor: 2.724

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.