| Literature DB >> 27512688 |
Marjolein Heuker1, Anna Gomes1, Jan Maarten van Dijl1, Gooitzen M van Dam2, Alexander W Friedrich1, Bhanu Sinha1, Marleen van Oosten1.
Abstract
Bacterial infections are a frequently occurring and major complication in human healthcare, in particular due to the rapid increase of antimicrobial resistance and the emergence of pan-drug-resistant microbes. Current anatomical and functional imaging modalities are insufficiently capable of distinguishing sites of bacterial infection from sterile inflammation. Therefore, definitive diagnosis of an infection can often only be obtained by tissue biopsy and subsequent culture and, occasionally, a definite diagnosis even appears to be impossible. To accurately diagnose bacterial infections early, novel imaging modalities are urgently needed. In this regard, bacteria-targeted imaging is an attractive option due to its specificity. Here, different bacteria-targeted imaging approaches are reviewed, and their promising future perspectives are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteria; Fluorescence; Imaging; Infection; Radioisotope; Tracer
Year: 2016 PMID: 27512688 PMCID: PMC4960279 DOI: 10.1007/s40336-016-0190-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Imaging ISSN: 2281-5872
Fig. 1In vivo optical imaging of Staphylococcus aureus infection. Micro-computed tomography image of a mouse that was infected with a bioluminescent S. aureus strain in the right hind limb, and with a bioluminescent E. coli strain in the left hind limb. The NIR tracer vanco-800CW was administered intravenously [37]. The bioluminescence signal emitted by the infecting S. aureus and E. coli cells is depicted in rainbow scale, and the fluorescence signal due to vanco-800CW-binding in red–yellow scale. A clear co-registration of bioluminescence and NIR fluorescence was detected at the site of S. aureus infection. Moreover, a NIR fluorescence signal was detected in the bladder (in this image visible behind the spine). This bladder signal reflects the renal excretion of the tracer.
Reprinted with permission from [37]
Fig. 2Mechanistic principle of β-lactam-based smart-activatable tracers. The intact tracer does not emit light due to the presence of a quencher (gray sphere). After hydrolysis of the β-lactam ring by a β-lactamase, the quencher is detached from the fluorophore (green sphere) and the tracer emits light
Overview of infections, with most common causative micro-organisms, and potentially suitable tracers for detection
| Infection | Common causative micro-organisms (>10 %) | Potential tracers for detection | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Necrotizing fasciitis |
| CEF, CIP, FIAU, MALT, UBI, VAN | |
| Septic arthritis |
| CEF, CIP, FIAU, FLER, MALT, NUC, PRO, UBI, VAN | |
| Infective endocarditis |
| CEF, CIP, FIAU, MALT, NUC, PRO, UBI, VAN | |
| Infected surgical meshes |
| CEF, CIP, FIAU, MALT, NUC, PRO, UBI, VAN | |
| Infected surgical grafts and meshes |
| CEF, CIP, FIAU, MALT, NUC, PRO, UBI, VAN | |
| Meningitis |
| CEF, FIAU, MALT, UBI | The tracer has to cross the blood–brain barrier |
| Bacteremia | Miscellaneous | CEF, CIP, FIAU, MALT, NUC, PRO, SOR, UBI, VAN, BLA | |
| Pneumonia |
| CEF, CIP, FIAU, MALT, NUC, PRO, SOR, UBI, BLA |
Tracers can be suitable in two possible ways, namely (1) detection of infection by targeting the vast majority of causative pathogens, or (2) by detection of particular species, which would have direct implications for the choice of therapy. Ideally, future approaches would offer both possibilities. Potentially usable tracers not only include the tracers in their current published structures but also future variants (e.g., modification from radiolabeled to optically labeled, or vice versa). Microorganisms and tracers are mentioned in alphabetical order
aMicro-organisms that occur in less than 10 % of the cases, but are classically associated with the respective infection. The specific tracers listed are: 99mTc-ceftriaxone (CEF), 99mTc-ciprofloxacin/18F-ciprofloxacin (CIP), 124Iodine-FIAU (FIAU), 18F-fleroxacin (FLER), 6-[18F]-fluoromaltose/maltodextrin-based optical tracer (MALT), activatable nuclease-targeted optical tracer (S. aureus-directed; NUC), prothrombin-based optical/radiolabeled tracer (PRO), 2-[18F]-fluoro-deoxy-sorbitol (SOR), 99mTc-ubiquicidin (UBI), vancomycin-IRDye 800CW (VAN), activatable β-lactamase-targeted optical tracer (BLA). HACEK organisms (fastidious Gram-negative bacilli): Haemophilus spp., Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Cardiobacterium hominis, Eikenella corrodens, Kingella kingae/Kingella denitrificans