| Literature DB >> 27562024 |
B Wu1, G Warnock2, M Zaiss3, C Lin1, M Chen4, Z Zhou1, L Mu5, D Nanz6, R Tuura7, G Delso8.
Abstract
The search for novel image contrasts has been a major driving force in the magnetic resonance (MR) research community, in order to gain further information on the body's physiological and pathological conditions.Chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) is a novel MR technique that enables imaging certain compounds at concentrations that are too low to impact the contrast of standard MR imaging and too low to directly be detected in MRS at typical water imaging resolution. For this to be possible, the target compound must be capable of exchanging protons with the surrounding water molecules. This property can be exploited to cause a continuous buildup of magnetic saturation of water, leading to greatly enhanced sensitivity.The goal of the present review is to introduce the basic principles of CEST imaging to the general molecular imaging community. Special focus has been given to the comparison of state-of-the-art CEST methods reported in the literature with their positron emission tomography (PET) counterparts.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27562024 PMCID: PMC4999387 DOI: 10.1186/s40658-016-0155-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Phys ISSN: 2197-7364
Fig. 1a Diagram illustrating the process of CEST: in a solute, the small quantity of chemical substance containing an amine group (-NH) is saturated by a RF, which initially reduces the signal of the substance (shown as the hollow bar); then, the saturated hydrogen proton is transferred to water in return for an unsaturated hydrogen; this process continues that leads to amplified water signal reduction (assumes that the saturation level on the chemical substance itself remains unchanged). This process will continue subject to the T1 relaxation and back exchange. b Comparison between conventional T2-weighted image and CEST at 4.2 ppm: only Ultravist (Iopromide solution) and egg white yielded CEST contrast
Fig. 2a B0 inhomogeneity causes the entire z-spectrum to be shifted, causing a mismatch between the assumed and actual 0 ppm position. Dense sampling (red dots) around the expected water frequency allows the frequency shift α to be derived (often performed with a low power short-duration RF), which may be used to shift back the z-spectrum; b the MTRasym curve may be derived after the B0 field correction, and CEST effects are observed around τ ppm as indicated by the peak in MTRasym
Fig. 3Illustration of the CEST acquisition: saturation RF is played at different spectral positions on the z-spectrum, followed by (usually) single-shot data acquisition. The total scan time is the product of the number of spectral points acquired and the time needed for each image. The relative variation of signal intensity with different spectral offsets can be clearly seen
Fig. 4APT (left) and PET (right) images of a tumor and b ischemic stroke (MR and PET images are in each case from different patients). In tumors, an increased level of APT is observed, whereas decreased APT is seen in stroke. The PET tracers used were [18F]FET and [15O]H2O, respectively. Altered level of standard uptake levels are observed in the PET images in these cases. The PET images are shown exemplarily; therefore, we did not include any scale bars or quantification information
Fig. 5Comparison of anatomical images (a, c) and Glu-CEST (b, d) maps in wild-type control (top) and Alzheimer’s disease (bottom) model mice. Significantly decreased Glu-CEST levels were observed in the hippocampus of Alzheimer’s disease model mice, indicating the potential value of Glu-CEST as a biomarker for AD. (Reproduced from [55] with permission)
Fig. 6(top) Gag-CEST showed a high correlation with the Gag distribution map obtained using 23Na MR images in joint cartilage (reproduced from [64] with permission); (bottom) d-glucose is infused in mice inoculated with breast tumors, and the difference between Gluco-CEST pre- and post-infusion images shows increased glucose levels in the tumors (reproduced from [67] with permission)
Comparative summary of diaCEST vs PET
| CEST | PET | |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution | On the order of 1–2 mm | In the order of 4–5 mm |
| Sensitivity | Dependent on the targeted species as well as saturation scheme. | Can detect picomolar concentrations of radiotracer. |
| Selectivity | Selective for exogenous CEST agents. | Selectivity defined by radiotracer molecule. |
| Field-of-view | Inherently same as MR, in practice currently limited by the scan time. | Up to whole-body acquisition, in blocks defined by the axial coverage of the detector, typically 15-25 cm. |
| Scan length | Typically 1–2 min per sweep of the spectrum. | Typically 2 min per bed position for body imaging, 10 min for brain. |
| Risks | SAR caused by excessive RFs may lead to heating damage. This is prevented by built-in software safety measures. | A dose of ionizing radiation is delivered to the patient, both by the radiotracer itself and by the transmission scan used for attenuation correction purposes. |
| Pitfalls | At present, only a limited number of metabolites can be detected at 3 T. CEST acquisitions are severely limited by motion, especially in areas of B0 or B1 inhomogeneity. | Gamma attenuation information is required for quantitative reconstruction. This may be acquired by means of external gamma sources, or inferred from CT or MR images. |
Comparison of CEST with closest nuclear medicine alternatives
| Target | Method | Contrast/mechanism | Preparation | Acquisition timea | Resolutionb | Field strength | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body tumors | Hydroxyl CEST |
| 6 h fasting | N/A (preclinical) | N/A (preclinical) | 9.4 T | Human studies |
| FDG PET | [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose/glucose metabolism | 4 h fasting | ~2 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Clinical use | |
| Choline PET | [18F]Fluorocholine/cell membrane synthesis | 24 h diet | ~2 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Clinical use | |
| PSMA PET | [68Ga]PSMA/prostate-specific membrane antigen | 60 min uptake | ~4 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| DOTATATE PET | [68Ga]DOTA-conjugated peptides/somatostatin receptors | 60 min uptake | ~2 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| FMISO PET | [18F]Fluoromisonidazole/macromolecules, hypoxia | 90 min uptake | ~10 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| Brain tumors | Amide CEST | None/protein concentration | Not needed | ~40 s/slice | ~2.2 × 2.2 × 4.4 mm3 | 3 T | Human studies |
| Amine CEST | None/pH | Not needed | ~1 min/slice | ~2.3 × 2.3 × 6.0 mm3 | 3 T | Human studies | |
| FET PET | [18F]Fluoroethyltyrosine/amino acid | 4 h fasting | ~20 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Clinical use | |
| FLT PET | [18F]Fluorothymidine/DNA synthesis, proliferation | 45 min uptake | ~60 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| FDOPA PET | [18F]Fluoro-L-DOPA/dopamine receptors | 15 min uptake | ~30 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| FMISO PET | [18F]Fluoromisonidazole/macromolecules, hypoxia | 90 min uptake | ~10 min | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| Stroke | Amide CEST | None/pH | Not needed | ~13 s/slice | 2.5 × 2.5 × 5.0 mm3 | 3 T | Human studies |
| H2O/O2/CO PET | H2[15O]-O, [15O]-O2, C[15O]O/cerebral blood flow, oxygen consumption, blood volume (combined: oxygen extraction fraction) | Not needed | ~3 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| NH3 PET | [13N]Ammonia/cerebral blood flow | Not needed | ~10 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| FMISO PET | [18F]Fluoromisonidazole/macromolecules, hypoxia | 90 min uptake | ~10 min | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| Neurological state | Amine CEST | None/glutamate concentration | Not needed | ~10 min/slice | ~1 × 1 × 5 mm3 | 7 T | Human studies |
| Hydroxyl CEST | None/myo-inositol concentration | Not needed | N/A (preclinical) | N/A (preclinical) | 9.4 T | Animal studies | |
| mGluR5 PET | [11C]-ABP, [18F]-PSS232/mGluR5 receptor density | Not needed | ~2 min/bed dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| FDOPA PET | [18F]Fluoro-L-DOPA/dopamine receptors | 15 min uptake | ~30 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| Raclopride PET | [11C]Raclopride/dopamine receptors | Not needed | ~60 min dynamic | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Human studies | |
| FDG PET | [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose/glucose metabolism | 4 h fasting | ~2 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Clinical use | |
| Neurotransmitter transporter PET | Various/dopamine transporter, serotonin transporter | Various | Various | N/A | N/A | Animal studies | |
| SV2A PET | [18F]UCB-H, [11C]LEV/synaptic vesicle protein 2A | Various | Various | N/A | N/A | Animal studies | |
| Energetics | Amine CEST | None/creatine concentration | Not needed | ~48 s/slice | ~1 × 1 × 4 mm3 | 7 T | Human studies |
| FDG PET | [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose/glucose metabolism | 4 h fasting | ~2 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Clinical use | |
| Cartilage | Hydroxyl CEST | None/GAG concentration | Not needed | ~30 s/slice | ~0.7 × 0.7 × 3.0 mm3 | 7 T | Human studies |
| FDG PET | [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose/glucose metabolism | 4 h fasting | ~2 min/bed | ~4 × 4 × 5 mm3 | N/A | Clinical use |
aPET acquisition times are provided per bed (i.e., anatomical station). The coverage of a PET bed varies with system geometry: PET/CT systems typically cover 70 × 70 × 15 cm, PET/MR systems 60 × 60 × 25 cm. Whole-body imaging (typically head-to-mid-thighs) requires between 6 and 8 beds
bThe intrinsic resolution of PET systems decreases away from the center of the field-of-view (typically 1–2 mm). It is also dependent on the reconstruction algorithm. Standard measurements provided by manufacturers are performed using filtered backprojection, seldom used in clinical practice these days. The values provided here are approximations, representative of the average resolution that can be expected in state-of-the-art systems using iterative reconstruction methods. In the case of CEST, resolutions are not inherently limited but given by the scanner hardware, pulse sequence, and acquisition time. Typical values reported in recent literature are listed here as a reference