Literature DB >> 26503290

Small-Animal Molecular Imaging for Preclinical Cancer Research: .μPET and μ.SPECT.

Vincenzo Cuccurullo, Giuseppe D Di Stasio, Maria L Schillirò, Luigi Mansi1.   

Abstract

Due to different sizes of humans and rodents, the performance of clinical imaging devices is not enough for a scientifically reliable evaluation in mice and rats; therefore dedicated small-animal systems with a much higher sensitivity and spatial resolution, compared to the ones used in humans, are required. Smallanimal imaging represents a cutting-edge research method able to approach an enormous variety of pathologies in which animal models of disease may be used to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the human condition and/or to allow a translational pharmacological (or other) evaluation of therapeutic tools. Molecular imaging, avoiding animal sacrifice, permits repetitive (i.e. longitudinal) studies on the same animal which becomes its own control. In this way also the over time evaluation of disease progression or of the treatment response is enabled. Many different rodent models have been applied to study almost all kind of human pathologies or to experiment a wide series of drugs and/or other therapeutic instruments. In particular, relevant information has been achieved in oncology by in vivo neoplastic phenotypes, obtained through procedures such as subcutaneous tumor grafts, surgical transplantation of solid tumor, orthotopic injection of tumor cells into specific organs/sites of interest, genetic modification of animals to promote tumor-genesis; in this way traditional or innovative treatments, also including gene therapy, of animals with a cancer induced by a known carcinogen may be experimented. Each model has its own disadvantage but, comparing different studies, it is possible to achieve a panoramic and therefore substantially reliable view on the specific subject. Small-animal molecular imaging has become an invaluable component of modern biomedical research that will gain probably an increasingly important role in the next few years.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26503290     DOI: 10.2174/1874471008666151027154148

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Radiopharm        ISSN: 1874-4710


  3 in total

1.  Feasibility Assessment of a MALDI FTICR Imaging Approach for the 3D Reconstruction of a Mouse Lung.

Authors:  E Ellen Jones; Cristine Quiason; Stephanie Dale; Sheerin K Shahidi-Latham
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2017-04-11       Impact factor: 3.109

Review 2.  The Role of Molecular Imaging in a Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Patient: A Narrative Review in the Era of Multimodality Treatment.

Authors:  Vincenzo Cuccurullo; Giuseppe Danilo Di Stasio; Francesco Manti; Pierpaolo Arcuri; Rocco Damiano; Giuseppe Lucio Cascini
Journal:  Diagnostics (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-11

3.  99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC is a New Opportunity in Neuroendocrine Tumors of the Lung (and in other Malignant and Benign Pulmonary Diseases).

Authors:  Vittorio Briganti; Vincenzo Cuccurullo; Valentina Berti; Giuseppe D Di Stasio; Flavia Linguanti; Francesco Mungai; Luigi Mansi
Journal:  Curr Radiopharm       Date:  2020
  3 in total

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