| Literature DB >> 21392409 |
Elizabeth A M O'Flynn1, Nandita M DeSouza.
Abstract
Functional magnetic resonance (MR) encompasses a spectrum of techniques that depict physiological and molecular processes before morphological changes are visible on conventional imaging. As understanding of the pathophysiological and biomolecular processes involved in breast malignancies evolves, newer functional MR techniques can be employed that define early predictive and surrogate biomarkers for monitoring response to chemotherapy. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is increasingly used in women with primary breast malignancies to down-stage the tumour and enable successful breast conservation surgery. It also plays a role in the treatment of undetected micrometastases. Cardinal physiological features of tumours that occur as a result of interactions between cancer cells, stromal cells and secreted factors and cytokines and how they change with treatment provide the opportunity to detect changes in the tumour microenvironment prior to any morphological change. Through sequential imaging, tumour response can be assessed and non-responders can be identified early to enable alternative therapies to be considered. This review summarises the functional magnetic resonance biomarkers of response in patients with breast cancer that are currently available and under development. We describe the current state of each biomarker and explore their potential clinical uses and limitations in assessing treatment response. With the aid of selected interesting cases, biomarkers related to dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI, diffusion-weighted MRI, T2*/BOLD and MR spectroscopy are described and illustrated. The potential of newer approaches, such as MR elastography, are also reviewed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21392409 PMCID: PMC3109577 DOI: 10.1186/bcr2815
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Figure 1Time-signal intensity curve for breast lesions. A type I curve shows progressive enhancement in which the signal continues to increase over the whole dynamic study. A type II curve plateaus off after an initial increase in enhancement. A type III curve demonstrates immediate washout after a rapid increase in enhancement.
Figure 2Distribution of gadolinium diethylenetriamine penta-acetic acid (Gd-DTPA) in body compartments after intravenous (iv) injection.
Figure 3Images showing pharmacokinetic modelling parameters. (a-c) Malignant tumour within the breast illustrated on dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and using the vascular parameters: (a) transfer constant (Ktrans); (b) extravascular extracellular space (ve); (c) rate constant from extravascular/extracellular space back into plasma (kep). All these parameters are higher at the tumour periphery compared to the centre and in the satellite nodule, indicative of more neoangiogenesis in these areas.
Figure 4Diagram illustrating free and restricted diffusion of water in different tissues. ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; DWI, diffusion weighted imaging.
Figure 5Diffusion weighted images of a breast tumour. (a) Sagittal T2W image through the breast shows a well-defined lobulated mass inferiorly. (b) This appears as a bright area of restricted diffusion on the corresponding diffusion weighted MRI (DW-MRI) image (b = 200). (c) The calculated apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map shows the heterogeneity of diffusion coefficient values within the tumour.
Figure 6T. (a-c) Sagittal T2W (a), dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) subtracted image at time point 2.44 minutes (b), and T2*W image (c) in a patient with a palpable breast lump in the upper outer quadrant. The tumour seen in (a) and highlighted in (b) shows heterogeneity of T2* with faster signal decay in the inferior part of the tumour, indicating a greater deoxyhaemoglobin content here.
Reported changes quantified on functional magnetic resonance following neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer
| Functional technique and study | Responders | Non-responders | Time point imaged after NAC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ah-See | Ktrans ↓39.8% | Ktrans ↑18.1% | 2 cycles |
| kep ↓33.3% | kep ↑7.4% | 2 cycles | |
| rBV ↓59.3% | rBV ↑73.4% | 2 cycles | |
| rBF ↓56.4% (n = 19) | rBF ↑70.6% (n = 19) | 2 cycles | |
| Pickles | Ktrans ↓19.7% | Ktrans ↓19.6% | 'At early time point' |
| kep ↓19.9% | kep ↓36.2% | ||
| ve ↑4.36% (n = 48) | ve ↑27.6% (n = 20) | ||
| Padhani | Ktrans ↓22% (n = 9) | Ktrans ↓6.5% (n = 6) | 1 cycle |
| Ktrans ↓62% (n = 7) | Ktrans ↓25% (n = 6) | 2 cycles | |
| Pickles | ↑16% (n = 10) | NA | 1 cycle |
| ↑27% (n = 10) | NA | 2 cycles | |
| Sharma | ↑15% (n = 14) | NA | 1 cycle |
| ↑27% (n = 24) | NA | 2 cycles | |
| ↑35% (n = 29) | NA | 3 cycles | |
| Nilsen | ↑25% (n = 25) | NA | 4 cycles |
| Li | ↑10% (n = 27) | NA | 2 cycles |
| Jacobs | ↓35% (n = 15) | ↓11% (n = 3) | 1 cycle |
| Jacobs | ↓27% (n = 15) | ↓21% (n = 3) | 1 cycle |
ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; Cho, choline; DCE, dynamic contrast-enhanced; DW, diffusion-weighted; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; NA, sodium; NAC, neoadjuvant chemotherapy; rBF, relative blood flow; rBV, relative blood volume; SNR, signal-to-noise ratio.