| Literature DB >> 29212283 |
Zuoyu Xu1,2, Xiao-Feng Li1,2, Hongyan Zou1, Xilin Sun1,2, Baozhong Shen1,2.
Abstract
Hypoxia is a common feature of solid tumors that is closely associated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy resistance, metastasis and tumors prognosis. Thus, it is important to assess hypoxia in tumors for estimating prognosis and selecting appropriate treatment procedures. 18F-Fluoromisonidazole positron emission tomography (18F-FMISO PET) has been widely used to visualize tumor hypoxia in a comprehensive and noninvasive way, both in the clinical and preclinical settings. Here we review the concept, mechanisms and detection methods of tumor hypoxia. Furthermore, we discuss the correlation between 18F-FMISO PET and other detection methods, current applications of 18F-FMISO PET and the development prospects of this imaging technology.Entities:
Keywords: 18F-Fluoromisonidazole; PET; hypoxia; tumor
Year: 2017 PMID: 29212283 PMCID: PMC5706929 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.21662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Chemical structure of 18F-FMISO
Figure 2PET imaging
Major organs and regions uptake at 2 h after injection of 18F-FMISO (B) in small cell lung cancer patient. Arrows point to tumor. (Wei Y, Zhao W, Huang Y, Yu Q, Zhu S, et al. (2016). A Comparative Study of Noninvasive Hypoxia Imaging with 18F-Fluoroerythronitroimidazole and 18F-Fluoromisonidazole PET/CT in Patients with Lung Cancer. PLOS ONE 11(6): e0157606. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157606).
Summary of studies using 18F-FMISO PET in tumor hypoxia
| Tumor | Time points | Conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| HNSCC | 120 min | Summarizing the 18F-FMISO uptake represents a global value for macroscopic tumor parts. As a noninvasive measurement this method seems highly feasible to evaluate the state of oxygenation in subjacent tumors. | [ |
| STS | 1.5 h, 2.5 h, 3.5 h | 18F-FMISO PET in our setting seemed not to be feasible for the detection of tumour hypoxia in human soft tissue tumors. | [ |
| OSCC | 4 h | 18F-FMISO uptake in the primary site of OSCC indicates a hypoxic environment with HIF-1α expression. | [ |
| Glioma | 120 min | The IRS of HIF-1α in the tumour did not correlate with the SUVtumor of 18F-FMISO in either newly diagnosed or recurrent glioma. | [ |
| Glioma | 120 min | Preoperative 18F-FMISO uptake is significantly correlated with the expression of VEGF in the tumour and might be used as a biomarker of antiangiogenic treatment in newly diagnosed malignant gliomas. | [ |
| HNSCC | 4 h | The values for 18F-FMISO PET uptake and hypoxic volume in head and neck tumors between the 2 18F-FMISO scans were highly reproducible. | [ |
| RCC | 2 h | Although 18F-FMISO scans showed significant uptake in other solid tumors, there was only mild 18F-FMISO uptake in the present RCCs. The invasive measurements indicated that there was hypoxia in RCC, but the median PO2 did not fall below 9.5 mmHg. | [ |
| HNSCC | 162 min | Of 13 patients, 6 had well-correlated intratumor distributions of 18F-FMISO suggestive of chronic hypoxia. | [ |
| FaDu and CAL-33 xenografted tumors | 2 h | Whether the Wang model can be used to predict radiation response after serial 18F-FMISO PET imaging, needs to be confirmed in experimental and clinical studies. | [ |
| Glioma | 4 h | 18F-FMISO PET may distinguish glioblastoma multiforme from lower grade gliomas. | [ |
| Glioma | 120 min | 18F-FMISO PET is a potential tracer in the assessment of noninvasive tumor grading in newly diagnosed gliomas. | [ |
| HNSCC | 2 h | Hypoxia-targeted radiotherapy dose painting for head and neck cancer using FMISO PET is technically feasible, increases the TCP without increasing the NTCP, and increases the UTCP. 18F-FMISO PET is superior to uniform dose escalation. | [ |
| C6 and 9L glioblastomas rat tumor model | dynamic 18F-FMISO PET (for a total of 2 hours) | This has implications for improved patient selection, particularly in clinical trials, for treatment with hypoxia-activated cytotoxic prodrugs, such as evofosfamide. | [ |
| HNSCC | 2 h | Hypoxia on 18F-FMISO PET imaging, in patients receiving a nontirapazamine-containing chemoradiotherapy regimen, is associated with a high risk of LRF. | [ |
| A549 peritoneal micrometastases model | 2 h | Microscopic non-small cell lung cancer metastases are severely hypoxic. 18F-FMISO PET is capable to image hypoxia noninvasively not only in macroscopic tumors but also in micrometastases growing in mice. 18F-misonidazole may be a promising agent to detect the burden of micrometastatic diseases. | [ |
| glioblastoma multiforme | 120 to 140 min | This type of imaging could be integrated into new treatment strategies to target hypoxia more aggressively in glioblastoma multiforme and could be applied to assess the treatment outcomes. | [ |
| ER-α-positive breast cancer | 2 and 4 h | 18F-FMISO PET/CT can be used to predict primary endocrine resistance in ER-positive breast cancer. | [ |
| mRCC | 2–4 h | Sunitinib reduced hypoxia in initially hypoxic RECIST target metastases but did not induce significant hypoxia in nonhypoxic RECIST target metastases. Patients with initially hypoxic targets have shorter PFS than others. | [ |
HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; STS, soft tissue sarcomas; OSCC, oral squamous cell carcinoma; IRS, immunoreactivity score; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; TCP, tumor control probability; NTCP, normal tissue complication probability; UTCP, uncomplicated tumor control probability; LRF, locoregional failure; ER+, positive estrogen receptor; PFS, progression-free survival; RECIST, response evaluation criteria in solid tumors.