| Literature DB >> 27379987 |
Ana Luiza Ribeiro de Souza1,2, Kayla Marra1, Jason Gunn1, Kimberley S Samkoe1,3, P Jack Hoopes1,3, Joachim Feldwisch4, Keith D Paulsen1,3, Brian W Pogue5,6.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Fluorescence guidance in surgical oncology provides the potential to realize enhanced molecular tumor contrast with dedicated targeted tracers, potentially with a microdose injection level. For most glioma tumors, the blood brain barrier is compromised allowing some exogenous drug/molecule delivery and accumulation for imaging. The aberrant overexpression and/or activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is associated with many types of cancers, including glioblastoma, and so the use of a near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent molecule targeted to the EGFR receptor provides the potential for improving tumor contrast during surgery. Fluorescently labeled affibody molecule (ABY-029) has high EGFR affinity and high potential specificity with reasonably fast plasma clearance. In this study, ABY-29 was evaluated in glioma versus normal brain uptake from intravenous injection at a range of doses, down to a microdose injection level. PROCEDURE: Nude rats were inoculated with the U251 human glioma cell line in the brain. Tumors were allowed to grow for 3-4 weeks. ABY-029 fluorescence ex vivo imaging of brain slices was acquired at different time points (1-48 h) and varying injection doses from 25 to 122 μg/kg (from human protein microdose equivalent to five times microdose levels).Entities:
Keywords: Anti-EGFR affibody molecule; Glioma; Pre-GMP ABY-029; fluorescence-guided surgery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27379987 PMCID: PMC5209393 DOI: 10.1007/s11307-016-0980-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Imaging Biol ISSN: 1536-1632 Impact factor: 3.488
Fig. 1.Multiple plane co-registration of brain tumor morphology (a, d) and ABY-029 fluorescence (b, c) in a series of brain slices from the same rat. The tumor regions are fairly obvious in the H&E, and are circled in the lower left H&E images, which correlate well with the fluorescence areas. Each row from columns a and b or c and d correspond to the same slice of the brain
Fig. 2.a The distribution of ABY-029 fluorescence in the tumor region immediately after tissue removal. b The heterogeneity of fluorescence signal distribution for each corresponding slice. c The H&E-stained tissue. d The EGFR-stained tissue. This information illustrates the true EGFR expression patterns.
Fig. 3.These images represent the presence of fluorescent (EGFR) tumor cells at the margin of the primary tumor mass. a Ex vivo fluorescence analysis. b H&E staining (×0.6 magnification). c H&E staining (×10 magnification) and visualization of tumor cells migrating into normal brain tissue. The last row corresponds to sham surgery and, therefore, serves as a control brain tissue.
Fig. 4.Normalized fluorescent signals are shown for all tumor and normal tissues slices analyzed, at all three dose levels (24.5, 49, 122.5 μg/kg), and at varying times following injection (1 h up to 24 h or 48 h). *P < 0.05, Student’s t test.
Fig. 5.Fluorescence from the contralateral normal brain as a function of the observed tumor size for a microdose (24.5 μg/kg) and b five times the microdose (122.5 μg/kg); 1 h (closed symbols) and 24 h (open symbols) post-injection. The lines correspond significant trends observed from linear regression. c T1 (left) and T2 (right) MRI of a U251 tumor-bearing rat post-gadolinium injection. The tumor (T) can be seen as a focal region in the T1, with peri-tumor edema (E) in the T2 image.
Fig. 6.The tumor-to-normal brain contrast values are expressed as mean values ± standard error of mean using the ratio of data from Fig. 4 for each injection concentration and time point studied.