| Literature DB >> 22423895 |
Jennifer M Specht1, David A Mankoff.
Abstract
Advances in our ability to assay molecular processes, including gene expression, protein expression, and molecular and cellular biochemistry, have fueled advances in our understanding of breast cancer biology and have led to the identification of new treatments for patients with breast cancer. The ability to measure biologic processes without perturbing them in vivo allows the opportunity to better characterize tumor biology and to assess how biologic and cytotoxic therapies alter critical pathways of tumor response and resistance. By accurately characterizing tumor properties and biologic processes, molecular imaging plays an increasing role in breast cancer science, clinical care in diagnosis and staging, assessment of therapeutic targets, and evaluation of responses to therapies. This review describes the current role and potential of molecular imaging modalities for detection and characterization of breast cancer and focuses primarily on radionuclide-based methods.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22423895 PMCID: PMC3446362 DOI: 10.1186/bcr3094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Molecular imaging for breast cancer
| Modality | Indication | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radionuclide imaging | |||
| Positron emission tomography | Detection | Wide range of molecular imaging probes | Limited spatial resolution (improved with use of non-contrast computed tomography) |
| Response evaluation | Tracer imaging without perturbing biologic system | ||
| Some radiation exposure | |||
| Positron emission | Detection | More sensitive for smaller tumors | Increased radiation dose |
| Breast-specific gamma imaging | Detection | More sensitive for smaller tumors | Associated with radiation exposure |
| Some radiation exposure | |||
| Magnetic resonance | |||
| Magnetic resonance imaging | Tumor characterization | Quantification of tumor perfusion | Confined space |
| Magnetic resonance spectroscopy | Tumor characterization | Can measure wide range of molecules | Limited spatial resolution |
| Ultrasound, especially with | Detection | Highly portable, inexpensive | Operator dependence |
| Optical imaging | Tumor characterization | Inexpensive, highly portable, and does | Limited depth penetration, challenging |
Figure 1Demonstration of invasive breast carcinomas with . Images were made with dedicated breast PEM (Naviscan system; Naviscan, San Diego, CA, USA). PEM images show a 23-mm infiltrating ductal carcinoma in the right breast on medio-lateral oblique (MLO) view (a) and a left breast 12-mm infiltrating ductal carcinoma also on MLO view (b). Images are courtesy of James Rogers, of the Swedish Cancer Institute, and Lawrence MacDonald, of the University of Washington.
Figure 2Targeting tumor vasculature: sunitinib. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) (left) and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) images (right) before therapy (top) and after 1 week of sunitinib (bottom). DCE-MRI studies show gray-scale images with color-coded regional perfusion (signal enhancement ratio, or SER) superimposed. Red indicates high levels of perfusion, and blue indicates lower levels. DCE-MRI and FDG PET with kinetic analysis were used to monitor breast cancer response to neoadjuvant sunitinib and metronomic chemotherapy.
Figure 3Example of 16α-[. (Left) PET emission image. (Right) PET-computed tomography fusion image. In the emission image, increased tracer uptake appears dark, whereas in the fusion image, increased uptake appears white/yellow. Images show multiple sites of estrogen receptor-expressing bone metastases along with normal uptake and excretion of FES into the liver, kidneys, and bowel (dashed arrows).