| Literature DB >> 24724090 |
Abstract
Cancer is known to have unique metabolic features such as Warburg effect. Current cancer therapy has moved forward from cytotoxic treatment to personalized, targeted therapies, with some that could lead to specific metabolic changes, potentially monitored by imaging methods. In this paper we addressed the important aspects to study cancer metabolism by using image techniques, focusing on opportunities and challenges of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP)-MRS, positron emission tomography (PET), and mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) for mapping cancer metabolism. Finally, we highlighted the future possibilities of an integrated in vivo PET/MR imaging systems, together with an in situ MSI tissue analytical platform, may become the ultimate technologies for unraveling and understanding the molecular complexities in some aspects of cancer metabolism. Such comprehensive imaging investigations might provide information on pharmacometabolomics, biomarker discovery, and disease diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment response monitoring for clinical medicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24724090 PMCID: PMC3958648 DOI: 10.1155/2014/625095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Comparison of major imaging techniques for studying cancer metabolism.
| Imaging techniques | Advantages | Disadvantages | Clinical applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) | (i) Widely used medical imaging technique | (i) It has relatively long acquisition time | Brain, head and neck, prostate, breast, and cervix | [ |
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| Dynamic nuclear polarization- (DNP-) MRS | (i) Signal enhancements of over 10,000-fold of magnitude for stable isotope carbon-13 (13C) enriched compounds | Hyperpolarized 13C-labelled substrates have very short half-life (in tens of seconds) | Prostate | [ |
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| Positron emission tomography (PET) | (i) Widely used in clinical applications | (i) Not all tumors show a significant increase in metabolic activity on FDG-PET imaging |
Oral cancer, lymphoma, melanoma, lung cancer, esophageal cancer, and colorectal cancer | [ |
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| Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) | (i) Highly sensitive | Analytical technique of tissue section, not noninvasive imaging | Brain, oral, lung, breast, gastric, pancreatic, renal, ovarian, and prostate cancer | [ |
Figure 13D [1-13C]Pyruvate dynamic nuclear hyperpolarization magnetic resonance spectroscopy (DNP-MRS) imaging in a patient with prostate cancer. The upper panel shows an axial T2-weighted images and corresponding spectral array with the area of putative tumor highlighted by pink shading. A region of tumor was observed on the T2-weighted images (red arrows). A region of relatively high hyperpolarized [1-13C]lactate was observed in the same location as the abnormalities that had been observed on the multiparametric 1H staging exam. The lower panels show axial T2 images with and without metabolite overlays for different axial slices from the same patient. The colored regions in these overlays have a ratio of [1-13C]lactate/[1-13C]pyruvate ≥0.2. These demonstrated a large volume of bilateral cancer. Reprinted with permission from [106]. Copyright 2013 American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Figure 2An example of PET/CT and MRI in the female pelvis. A 43-year-old female patient with a primary well-differentiated adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix. Primary cervical tumor is highlighted (arrow) and well correlated in (a) diffusion-weighted MRI and (b) 18F-FDG PET/CT. Reprinted with permission from [56]. Copyright 2008 Springer-Verlag.
Figure 3Correlation of histopathology and mass spectrometry imaging. Serial sections of the tumor are used for histopathology (left) correlation with MSI results (right). Deconvolution of spectra is performed to separate 2H-labeled and unlabeled lipids. Intensity images are generated to show the spatial distribution for both newly synthesized and preexisting lipids. Reprinted with permission from [106]. Copyright 2013 Nature Publishing Group, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited.