| Literature DB >> 26779568 |
Xiang Xu1, Nirbhay N Yadav1, Linda Knutsson2, Jun Hua1, Rita Kalyani3, Erica Hall3, John Laterra4, Jaishri Blakeley4, Roy Strowd4, Martin Pomper5, Peter Barker1, Kannie Chan1, Guanshu Liu1, Michael T McMahon1, Robert D Stevens6, Peter C M van Zijl1.
Abstract
Recent animal studies have shown that D-glucose is a potential biodegradable MRI contrast agent for imaging glucose uptake in tumors. Here, we show the first translation of that use of D-glucose to human studies. Chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) MRI at a single frequency offset optimized for detection of hydroxyl protons in D-glucose (glucoCEST) was used to image dynamic signal changes in the human brain at 7T during and after infusion of D-glucose. Dynamic glucose-enhanced (DGE) image data from four normal volunteers and three glioma patients showed strong signal enhancement in blood vessels, while the enhancement varied spatially over the tumor. Areas of enhancement differed spatially between DGE and conventional Gd-enhanced imaging, suggesting complementary image information content for these two types of agents. In addition, different tumor areas enhanced with D-glucose at different times post-infusion, suggesting a sensitivity to perfusion-related properties such as substrate delivery and blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability. These preliminary results suggest that DGE MRI is feasible to study glucose uptake in humans, providing a time-dependent set of data that contains information regarding arterial input function (AIF), tissue perfusion, glucose transport across the BBB and cell membrane, and glucose metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: D-glucose; chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST); dynamic glucose-enhanced MRI; glioma patients; perfusion
Year: 2015 PMID: 26779568 PMCID: PMC4710854 DOI: 10.18383/j.tom.2015.00175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tomography ISSN: 2379-1381
Patient Characteristics
| Participant Number | Sex | Decade of Birth | Initial Histopathologic Diagnosis | Therapy Prior to DGE | Diagnosis at Time of DGE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Male | 1990 | Anaplastic astrocytoma (WHO grade III)[ | None | Anaplastic astrocytoma |
| 2 | Male | 1960 | Glioblastoma (WHO grade IV) | Surgery, radiation, temozolomide, experimental agent | Glioblastoma |
| 3 | Female | 1980 | Low-grade astrocytoma (WHO grade II) | Surgery, radiation | Glioblastoma |
WHO indicates World Health Organization.
a DGE scan performed before initial histopathologic diagnosis.
Figure 1.Healthy volunteer. (A) DGE difference images (5.3-s time resolution). (B) z-spectra in ventricle (blue) before (top) and after infusion (bottom) compared to average baseline (red). No difference is visible. (C) Venous blood glucose concentrations measured in 4 volunteers. (D) DGE signal evolution in an arterial vessel for these volunteers.
Figure 2.(A) Gadolinium-T1-weighted image acquired 1 h after DGE, (B) CEST raw image with ROIs, and (D, E) DGE-based AUC images for 2 different time periods relative to the start of infusion for the volunteer shown in Figure 1A. The time curves for several regions of interest are shown in (C).
Figure 3.DGE difference images (5.3-s time resolution) for participant 1 with anaplastic astrocytoma. A video of this wash-in process is available in the online version of this article.
Figure 4.Post-DGE and presurgical (A) T2-weighted, (B) gadolinium-T1-weighted, and (D–F) DGE-based AUC images for different time periods relative to the start of infusion for the participant shown in Figure 3. The dynamic time curves for several regions of interest are shown in (C).
Figure 5.DGE difference images (5.3-s time resolution) for participant 2 with a recurrent glioblastoma.
Figure 6.(A) Post-DGE and presurgical gadolinium T1-weighted image, (B) CEST raw image with ROIs, and (D–F) DGE-based AUC images for different time periods relative to the start of infusion for the participant shown in Figure 5. The time curves for several ROIs are shown in (C). Notice the motion artifacts from 60 to 130 s.
Figure 7.DGE difference images (5.3 s time resolution) for participant 3, who was initially operated for a low-grade glioma that subsequently progressed to glioblastoma.
Figure 8.(A) Post-DGE and presurgical gadolinium-T1-weighted image, (B) CEST raw image with ROIs, and (D, E) DGE-based AUC images for different time periods relative to the start of infusion for the participant shown in Figure 7. The time curves for several ROIs are shown in (C), showing the effects of movement during several periods.