| Literature DB >> 29525972 |
Vladimir Kepe1,2, Claudio Scafoglio1,3, Jie Liu1, William H Yong4, Marvin Bergsneider5, Sung-Cheng Huang1, Jorge R Barrio1, Ernest M Wright6.
Abstract
A novel glucose transporter, the sodium glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2), has been demonstrated to contribute to the demand for glucose by pancreatic and prostate tumors, and its functional activity has been imaged using a SGLT specific PET imaging probe, α-methyl-4-[F-18]fluoro-4-deoxy-D-glucopyaranoside (Me-4FDG). In this study, Me-4FDG PET was extended to evaluate patients with high-grade astrocytic tumors. Me-4FDG PET scans were performed in four patients diagnosed with WHO Grade III or IV astrocytomas and control subjects, and compared with 2-deoxy-2-[F-18]fluoro-D-glucose (2-FDG) PET and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the same subjects. Immunocytochemistry was carried out on Grade IV astrocytomas to determine the cellular location of SGLT proteins within the tumors. Me-4FDG retention was pronounced in astrocytomas in dramatic contrast to the lack of uptake into the normal brain, resulting in a high signal-to-noise ratio. Macroscopically, the distribution of Me-4FDG within the tumors overlapped with that of 2-FDG uptake and tumor definition using contrast-enhanced MRI images. Microscopically, the SGLT2 protein was found to be expressed in neoplastic glioblastoma cells and endothelial cells of the proliferating microvasculature. This preliminary study shows that Me-4FDG is a highly sensitive probe for visualization of high-grade astrocytomas by PET. The distribution of Me-4FDG within tumors overlapped that for 2-FDG, but the absence of background brain Me-4FDG resulted in superior imaging sensitivity. Furthermore, the presence of SGLT2 protein in astrocytoma cells and the proliferating microvasculature may offer a novel therapy using the SGLT2 inhibitors already approved by the FDA to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus.Entities:
Keywords: Astrocytomas; PET imaging; SGLT2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29525972 PMCID: PMC5999166 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-018-2823-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Patients in study
| Patient | Age sex | MRI features | 2-FDG PET | Surgical pathology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| # 1 | 26 M | Unremarkable | Normal FDG uptake into cortical structures, basal ganglia, thalami, and cerebellum. No localizing evidence for epileptogenic focus in this patient with a history of epilepsy | N/A |
| #2 | 57 M | 4.6 cm rim-enhancing mass in the posterior corpus callosum, with a mostly non-enhancing central portion. Second solidly enhancing 0.6 cm mass in the left frontoparietal white matter. White matter edema present | Large hypermetabolic mass in the bifrontal white matter with a hypometabolic central area. A smaller hypermetabolic focus is identified in the left frontoparietal white matter. No evidence of extracranial malignant disease | Glioblastoma (WHO Grade IV). Malignant fibrillary astrocytes, mitoses and extensive necrosis are present. Ki67 estimated at 35–45% |
| #3 | 70 M | 5.3 cm mass in the paramedian left parietal lobe. Peripheral and solid enhancement. Necrotic non-enhancing area. Small amount of edema | Peripherally increased FDG activity with central photopenia | Glioblastoma (astrocytoma WHO Grade IV). Highly cellular infiltrating glial neoplasm with large areas of geographic necrosis. Numerous foci of glomeruloid endothelial hyperplasia and angiomatoid blood vessels are seen. Marked pleomorphism and hyperchromasia. Numerous mitoses are identified. Ki-67 estimated up to 15–20% |
| #4 | 67 F | 2.7 cm mass in posterior left frontal lobe. Enhances heterogeneously | Area of increased FDG uptake in the left frontal lobe, posterior aspect. The body does not show any abnormal focus of FDG uptake | Glioblastoma (WHO Grade IV). Infiltrating glial neoplasm. Atypical glial cells with enlarged nuclei and some perinuclear halos suggestive of oligodendroglial differentiation. Mitoses are easily found. Areas of vascular endothelial hyperplasia. Pseudopalisading necrosis is present. Ki-67 estimated at 25–30% |
| #5 | 42 M | 5.6 cm mass in the area of the left insula and anterior and mid temporal lobe with heterogeneous enhancement and significant surrounding vasogenic edema | Hypermetabolic activity in a mass in the left insula and left temporal lobe. No evidence for extracranial tumor | Gemistocytic anaplastic astrocytoma (WHO Grade III). Highly cellular, infiltrative GPAP positive glial tumor. Tumor cells show moderate to marked pleomorphism. Focal areas of punctate calcification are seen at the edge of the tumor, which also shows a minor oligodendroglial component. Multiple areas of robust glomeruloid endothelial proliferation. Rare mitotic figures are seen. Necrosis is absent. Ki-67 estimated focally up to 1–3% |
SGLT expression in WHO Grade IV astrocytoma patient specimens as taken from a brain tumor tissue repository
| ID | Diagnosis | Notes | Pathology in the IHC sample | SGLT1 staining | SGLT2 staining |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Gliosarcoma WHO Grade IV, recurrent; left occipital lobe | No tumor in the IHC sample; normal gray/white matter with reactive gliosis | Weak staining in neurons and/or astrocytes | Positive in reactive astrocytes + normal neurons in gray matter | |
| #2 | Glioblastoma, WHO Grade IV; left frontal lobe | EGFRVIII+ | Diagnosis of glioblastoma confirmed; high cellularity, areas of necrosis and microvascular proliferation | Nuclear staining in 50% of cells, including tumor cells | Positive in tumor cells (cytoplasmic + nuclear staining) and in glia; positive in blood vessels |
| #3 | Glioblastoma, WHO Grade IV; left temporal lobe | Diagnosis of glioblastoma confirmed | Nuclear staining | Cytoplasmic staining in tumor cells; also nuclear in some cells; blood vessels weakly positive | |
| #4 | Glioblastoma, WHO Grade IV; left frontal lobe | Ki67: 15–20% overall, 30% focally. GFAP diffusely positive | Diagnosis of glioblastoma confirmed; presence of abundant necrosis | Nuclear weak/moderate staining in 50–60% of the cells | Positive in tumor cells, with cytoplasmic + nuclear staining; some of the positive cells may be macrophages |
| #5 | Glioblastoma, WHO Grade IV; right temporal lobe | Ki67: variable, overall 30%. GFAP diffusely positive. IDH1 R132H positive. MGMT methylation | Diagnosis of glioblastoma confirmed; presence of abundant necrosis | Nuclear moderate staining; some focal, very weak cytoplasmic signal is present | Extensive nuclear staining of moderate intensity; occasional cytoplasmic staining; some cells have a membrane pattern. A part of the tissue is normal brain, with positivity of SGLT2 in neurons (cytoplasmic) |
Fig. 1Me-4FDG, MRI, and 2-FDG PET scans on 26-year-old control subject. The Me-4FDG S/N (SUVR/BG) scale 0–10 is shown for the NIH color scale, and the 2-FDG SUVR scale is 0.1–2.5 for the Hot-Iron color scale
Fig. 2Me-4FDG PET, 2-FDG PET, and MRI scans on WHO Grade IV astrocytoma patients. a Patient with a 46-mm posterior corpus callosum astrocytoma, and b patient with 53-mm posterior para median left parietal lobe glioblastoma. For Me-4FDG the S/N (SUVR/BG) the NIH color scales are those relative to the torcula, and for 2-FDG the SUVR scales are for the “Hot-Iron” color scale. SUVR for 2-FDG was based on white matter as reference region and not blood. SUVR for Me-4FDG was based on blood activity and we re-normalized it to brain tissue so that we actually are comparing the same values. Thus, that is why S/N is specified for Me-4FDG and SUVR is specified for 2-FDG in the scale bar
Fig. 3Me-4FDG PET and MRI scans on a WHO Grade IV astrocytoma patient. The Me-4FDG S/N (SUVR/BG) scale is for the NIH color scale
Fig. 4Me-4FDG PET, 2-FDG PET and MRI scans on a patient with an anaplastic astrocytoma (WHO Grade III). The Me-4FDG S/N (SUVR/BG) scales are for the NIH color scale and the 2-FDG SUVR scale is for the “Hot-Iron” color scale
Fig. 5Expression of SGLT1 and SGLT2 in glioblastoma cells. A representative sample of human glioblastoma (WHO Grade IV) involving the left frontal lobe, typically characterized by high cellularity, was stained SGLT1, showing mostly nuclear signal (a); SGLT2, showing both nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in tumor cells (c). SGLT1 + antigenic peptide (b); and SGLT2 + antigenic peptide (d). A higher magnification image showing SGLT2 in or close to the plasma membrane (e, red arrowheads), and block by the antigenic peptide (f)
Fig. 6Expression of SGLT1 and SGLT2 in microvascular proliferation. A representative sample of human glioblastoma showing the characteristic, irregularly shaped microvascular proliferation stained with a SGLT1, c SGLT2 and b, d with appropriate antigenic peptides. Note the intense specific staining of the endothelial cells with the SGLT2 antibody
Fig. 7Relationship between SGLT2 expression and glial markers. Adjacent sections of a human glioblastoma sample were stained with different markers: a hematoxylin and eosin (H & E), showing high cellularity around a blood vessel; b SGLT2 expression in the vessel endothelium, in the microglia/macrophages surrounding the blood vessel, and the cancer cells; c negative control with SGLT2 antibody after pre-incubation with the antigenic peptide; and glial markers CD68 (d) and CD163 (e), showing restricted expression in microglia/macrophages surrounding the blood vessel, and GFAP (f), showing diffuse immune-positivity